Word: steps
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...deserve notice. The stage business was excellent. Exeunt omnes. A solo by Dorothy Dosear's "Chanson du Colonel" came next. Then John Harvard enters. Duet, "Blacks Mantles" in which he is rejected follows. Exit Dorothy. Enter Rev. Milkweed and Cholmondely. Trio from "Erminie." Exeunt. Enter with a most graceful step. Chorus of Puritan maidens, led by Dorothy and Priscilla. Gray, Mars, Odell and Wetmore were especially charming. They must have gone to the original for lessons. Chorus, "Sam Johnson's Cake Walk," very pretty. Enter pirates, who make successful love to said maidens to a chorus from the "Little Duke...
...classic to a greater or less degree, and yet after all it seems as if a short one-syllabled name that we can think of supplies the place of Pennsylvania very well. Of course, if the Keystone State, including Philadelphia, should really want us at this late date to step down and out, of course, just for friendship's sake, we might be persuaded to leave the lately formed quadrangular league and make way for the league which sounds better...
...pity that greater care was not taken in laying the plank walks which in every other way are so satisfactory. The walks from Hollis to the eastern corner of Holworthy, and diagonally across the Delta, sway in some places with every step and bring the heavy or rapid step to a sudden stoppage by the noise which the boards make...
...number of seniors in regard to a Heliotype Album of the class I should like to say that the subject was considered by the Photographic Committee some time ago, and so far as they could learn, through personal inquiry, there were too few desiring the albums to warrant any step being taken by the committee. On a number of gentlemen requesting that action be taken for a Heliotype Album, the committee announces that Pach Brothers will make a Heliotype Album of all the members of the class of '87, provided that 100 men will sign and deposit five dollars apiece...
...long ago it was suggested in our columns that it would be a wise and beneficial thing to organize a dramatic club here at Harvard, in view of the success which has attended such organizations at Princeton, Yale and Columbia. Although no step has been as yet taken in this direction, we are convinced that the students only want to have the matter urged upon them, so we venture to repeat our exhortation of several weeks since. The good that such an association would do is obvious. In the first place it would lead to a better, more thorough knowledge...