Word: successful
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...must be made before tonight. More entries are needed and the whole University understands that they are; strong hopes are entertained by the management that not a few men will present themselves at this eleventh hour, and all men, who take a pride in seeing everything Harvard made a success, will share this hope. Let us speak a frank word about this. The Winter Meetings are losing their popularity and whether they would be advisable another year is a matter of doubt. The fact remains that this year they have been planned, advertised, and must be held. Men who could...
...time for entering for the first winter meeting of the H. A. A., which will occur next Saturday, has been extended until Tuesday night. There is every indication that the special events in the meeting will be a success. In the high jump Sweeney, the in-door champion of the world, Stingel, Macomber and other cracks will compete. There is also to be a very fine exhibition on the parallel bars. In the events open only to Harvard men,-fencing, broad-sword, tumbling, potato race, spring-board leaping, horizontal bar, and 10 yds. dash,-there have been very few entries...
...coming May will bring with it the twenty-fifth anniversity of Mr. Eliot's election as president of this University. Among the various clubs of Harvard graduates in the country, a movement is already on foot to ensure some appropriate recognition of such a long and successful term of office. In the whole history of Harvard, but one president has served for a longer term; none certainly has met with greater success...
...committee on the junior dinner have completed the initial part of their work, and the success of the occasion will be determined now by the action of the class. Already have we shown how heartily we approve of such a dinner and how much we believe can be accomplished by it in the way of establishing a sympathetic understanding between the different sorts of men in the class. Of course the dinner will have no such influence unless a very large proportion of the members participate. The occasion is sure to be entertaining, the cost is small, and there...
...number of students taking elementary courses in the laboratory being thus limited, cannot be taken as a fair measure of the success of the institution. The true success lies in the number of well trained teachers and investigators sent forth, and in this direction the results have been very satisfactory. During the past three years the laboratory has supplied to other institutions one professor, one assistant professor, and two instructors in physics. In the past year, moreover, two graduate students have gone into the practical applications of physical science; and these well trained men can extend the influence of this...