Word: successful
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...place at this point to call attention to the fall tournament of the Harvard Lawn Tennis Association which begins this morning. The unusually large number of entries for the tournament ensures its success and gives it a greater dignity than it has ever had before. As the tournament will go far toward deciding what men will be entitled to membership in the tennis league next spring, all the best players in the University are entered, and some very interesting matches may be expected...
...Schools is being entertained by the corporation of Harvard University. The meetings are held in Harvard 1, and both the classical and historical libraries have been elaborately fitted up for reception rooms. Professor J. H. Wright is on the committee of arrangements and to him is largely due the success of the entertainment...
Those who are interested in the new scheme of general tables at Memorial have been watching the experiment with the keenest interest. The success of the plan is earnestly hoped for by the Board of Directors and college authorities, for it means the solution of a very difficult question for both. The plan worked without any appreciable friction until the adoption of the rule requiring men who eat at the general tables to get a check from the Auditor before each meal. The very first time this rule was put in operation it received a severe test, and like...
...many courtesies shown the class and ourselves as members of the photograph committee of the class of ninety-one. We are pleased to say that the relation of photographer and student has always been of the pleasantest, and we leave behind us our best wishes for like success with all future classes...
...success of the national Democracy aims a blow at the interests of Massachusetts. - (a) It means an entire change of point on the tariff issue, threatening (1) the stability of many industries, and (2) the continued prosperity of the working classes. - (b) It gives countenance to an unsound currency, disastrous to moneyed interests of the Commonwealth: Lodge's speech of Sept. 17, Hoar's speech in Boston Journal of Sept. 23, Harper's Weekly...