Word: attendance
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...will hold a tea dance for Freshmen and their guests in the Union on Saturday afternoon after the Army game. Mrs. Delmar Leighton heads a list of twelve patronesses which includes Mrs. James B. Conant and Mrs. Gaspar G. Bacon. The other patronesses who have consented to attend are Mrs. Zabdiel Adams, Mrs. Trowbridge Calloway, Mrs. Leslie Cutler, Mrs. Leslie Friedman, Mrs. Herbert Jacques, Mrs. Matthew Luce, Mrs. Max L. Talbet, Mrs. Henry B. Prout, and Mrs. Edward L. Young...
...clock, respectively; however, after the football season is over, these exercise rooms will be open all afternoon. Practice for Freshmen fencers will be held from 2 to 4 o'clock every afternoon. Candidates for the swimming team will report at 3 o'clock, and advanced swimmers may attend classes at 2 and 2.30 o'clock...
Approximately 210 men will be required to attend the special exercise classes held three times a week, but these classes are also open to anybody who may wish to sign up. They are given for a six week's period by Norman W. Fradd, and include exercises to improve the posture and to strengthen the back...
...elevation. The students will go to the selected shows because they are forced to, and they will take part in the classroom discussions as perfunctorily as they swallow the rest of the dubious instruction daily forced down their unwilling throats, but when left to themselves they are sure to attend movies containing a plentiful supply of gangsters, gin, illicit love, and shots of Miss Ginger Rogers disrobing. Even should some enterprising teacher take her pupils to a genuinely amusing cinema, the task of discussing it would undoubtedly provide some embarrassing problems. Consider, for example, a class of tenth or ninth...
...undergraduate has been that the reduction should have been even more drastic, inasmuch as for all except the Army and Yale games, a goodly portion of the Stadium is empty, and these seats may just as well be sold at low prices to men who would not otherwise attend. If this view be correct, then the failure of the Athletic Association's plan is due to the fact that it has been carried out only half-heartedly, and the remedy is to establish lower priced seats and more of them, not only for students, but perhaps for the general public...