Word: widely
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Monday. Coach Ward thinks the material is very good, and hopes by next Saturday to be able to give the probable make-up of the crews for the fall regatta, which is to be held during the first week in November. If the Schuylkill is found to be wide enough the four college crews will all race at once, the winning crew to row in the final heat. The crews from the Medical and the Law Schools will race in the same way, if more than one crew is entered from each...
...source of much congratulation to the University that the registration list for 1896-97 shows a material increase. That the University-in spite of the wide-spread financial distress, in spite of the great political crisis now confronting the country, has gone on calmly and steadily growing, is indeed encouraging. It seems to point to a time in the near future when the annual increase will be much larger...
...great value of the subject itself is not the only reason why it is worth while to go to these lectures. It is a great privilege to hear such a man as Dr. Dorpfeld. His reputation is world-wide. He is the greatest Grecian archaelogist. His delivery is wonderfully fine and impressive. His enunciation is so clear and distinct that the most indifferent German student cannot fail to catch his meaning now and then. Added to this is the aid given by stereopticon illustrations, which in themselves convey some idea of the theme...
...public with a vividness never before possible the glories of ancient Greece. After his work at Olympia he carried on the excavations at Troy with Dr. Schliemann, and although Dr. Schliemann's name is more familiar in connection with Troy, it was really Dr. Dorpfeld's technical skill and wide experience that made the former's works possible. He next undertook with Schliemann excavations at Tiryns, Orchomenos, and in Crete; and, after Schliemann's death, returned to complete the work at Troy. His most important work after this has been in Greece, especially in and around Athens. As a result...
...University has suffered an irreparable loss in the deaths of Professor Child and Professor Whitney. Both were masters in their different branches of learning, of world wide reputation, and universally beloved and esteemed. The Faculty of our University has lost two wise and trusted counselors, and the students have lost two able and devoted teachers...