Word: displays
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Professor Moore also lays great emphasis on the need of such alterations or additions to the present Museum building, as may afford a suitable light for the display of the valuable paintings the Museum contains, and which at present can be seen only to very poor advantage. He suggests that a suitable gallery be constructed contiguous to the present building and connected with it by a short passage way. Such a gallery might be placed on the east side of the Museum, toward the new Architectural building, and might easily be made to harmonize both with the Architectural building...
...have the celebration on Holmes Field. A barge containing the members of the football team headed the line and after this the classes followed in order. At the field a bonfire had been built by the class of 1905, and around it the several classes gathered. There was a display of fireworks, and the members of the team, the coaches, the trainer and the captains of the other University teams were all cheered, Frantz leading. Then the celebration closed with singing "Down with Yale...
There will be a double celebration of the football victory this evening at the Union and on Holmes Field. Extensive preparations are being made for the affair. Kanrich's Band has been secured for the occasion and there will be a torchlight parade, together with a bonfire and a display of fireworks...
...water which has heretofore given much trouble. Mr. Ames attacked the problem in a thorough manner, and the result has been most gratifying. The water-plants have grown and bloomed well, and warrant the expectation that a continuation of the same policy next year will give a superb display of the finer water-lilies. It would be a great addition to the attractiveness of the Garden, if an aquatic house could be built on the upper terrace. In such a house it would be possible to cultivate the magnificent "Victoria regia," or Water-lily of the Amazons, and the varieties...
...sheer inertia, they are allowed to accumulate, or taken for a trifling sum to a second-hand book-store; yet could their owners realize the value of them for the educational work carried on by members of the University, they would perhaps be willing by this slight sacrifice or display of energy to assist the work to which others are giving so much of their time. There is at this time particular need for the Hill's Rhetoric in the work of the Prospect Union, and surely from so large a class as English A enough men should be found...