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President Eliot is quietly passing his eighty-sixth birthday in Cambridge today. As has been his custom in other years no special celebration will mark...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FAMOUS EDUCATOR 86 YEARS OF AGE TODAY | 3/20/1920 | See Source »

Next Wednesday evening, March 24, at 9 o'clock in the Dinning Room of the Union Professor Charles Townsend Copeland, of the Department of English, will read selections from O. Henry Kipling, and Dickens. In selecting the Dining Room for his reading, Professor Copeland is going back to his custom of past years...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Copeland Reads in Union | 3/20/1920 | See Source »

With Yale's easy victory over the swimming team on Wednesday night, another unsuccessful aquatic season draws to a close. It has become quite the custom now to read of Harvard's defeats in the water; when the team wins, it is actually an occasion for surprise. People not too familiar with conditions here wonder at the cause for this succession of routs, they smile at the facility with which the smaller colleges snatch contest after contest from Harvard, and they grope vaguely for the reason for our pitiful lack of prowess in swimming...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEEDED: A SWIMMING POOL | 3/19/1920 | See Source »

Following the custom in former triangular debates the negative team of each university will debate at home, and the affirmative away. Princeton and the University will debate at Cambridge, Yale and the University at New Haven, and Yale and Princeton at Princeton. The university winning both debates will be awarded the championship...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANNOUNCE DEBATING TEAMS | 3/12/1920 | See Source »

...order to re-unite the Senior Class before the separation which must come at Commencement, the custom of rooming in the Yard during the last year at college has grown up. The purpose of this is not to force unnatural friendships, for companionship with an uncongenial man can never be engendered by artificial means. But it is based on the fact that the continual contact, even though entirely superficial, which comes from constantly rubbing up against other members of the class tends to produce a distinct Class consciousness. If this end is to be gained, it is essential that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1921 AND THE YARD. | 3/11/1920 | See Source »

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