Word: campuses
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...vanquished foe" will bring up the rear. Ambrose D. Henry will be the imperator of the evening; a poem will be read by the haruspex, J. Foster Jenkins, Jr., and J. H. Ward, Jr., the carnifex, will deliver the oration. These exercises will be held on the college campus, after which the students and guests will march to the American Institute building and enjoy the convivium until morning...
...they did. It certainly was; yet who but our own freshmen urged on the visitors to the perpetration of acts they dared not do themselves?" The fact of the matter is, we learn from good authority, that there were but two of our freshmen on the Yale campus when the bonfire was started and the "uproar" took place. Still the Yale papers would have us believe that these two were sufficient to throw the whole city of New Haven into confusion...
...buildings will soon be added to those already in use. One, the physical and chemical laboratory, is in course of erection, and when completed will be not merely an ornament to the campus, but the most thoroughly equipped laboratory of the kind in the United States. The other is the new military hall and gymnasium. It is to be of brick, 150 feet deep by 60 feet front, and, besides satisfying the needs of the military department, will be supplied with all the appliances necessary to a gymnasium. An addition has also been made to the rooms of the botanical...
...game of base-ball was played on the campus last Saturday between Hobart and Cornell, resulting in a victory for the former. However, as our nine had practised very little, the result was no surprise. A game will be played tomorrow against Union, and Saturday the nine goes to Geneva to play the return game with Hobart...
...says, "discuss in our departments matters of general interest to the college press, and college world; create an inter-collegiate feeling beyond the mere exchange of college publications. There is enough which concerns us all, to make at least one department of our publications reach farther than our own campus confines." The growth of such a feeling is, we think, coming naturally in the course of events. Inter-collegiate sports, races and meetings, in one direction, are tending to foster this growth. In another, the widening feeling among college men, and college graduates, that they have many interests in common...