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...taken there and the goods will be delivered when finished. The material of the gown is alpaca, and will cost, with the cap, $7.50. Goods will be delivered by June 10 if measurements are left at the Co-operative before April 1. Class Day officers will wear, to distinguish them from the other seniors, a red tassel on their caps, the gowns remaining the same...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cap and Gown. | 3/16/1892 | See Source »

...response to a call for candidates for coxswain for the 'varsity crew only three men presented themselves. This is too small a number for so important a position. There are a great many good men in college who ought to make good candidates, and distinguish themselves in the performance of such important work. The men are John Fairlie, 106 lbs., L. W. Gilbert, 108 lbs., B. S. Thomas, 105 lbs. The men will be tried right away, and the best one saved for the boat. Those who wish to send their names or present themselves at once will still have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 'Varsity Crew Coxswains. | 3/8/1892 | See Source »

...West, but remain couped up in cities and the so-called "sweating system" is a result. Protection claims to protect the American laborer and yet she allows our ports to be open to cheap and pauper labor. These foreigners do not understand our ways of government. They cannot distinguish between unrestricted freedom and liberty, thus anarchism and the numerous cliques and secret societies, with all their evils, arise. Law is the expression of public sentiment and if we put the control of elections into the hands of the immigrant our law will not represent the sentiment of the more educated...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Union Debate. | 2/20/1892 | See Source »

...delightful reminiscence of "Mr. Lowell as a Teacher," by one of the class of '77, we fancy we can distinguish the touch of a prominent member of the English Department. It is a simple but graphic account of the author's relations with Mr. Lowell in 1876 and 1877 when he had the fortune to be his pupil. He tells of his first impressions of Mr. Lowell, his peculiar manner of conducting his courses, the influence of his wonderful personality upon all the men with whom he came in contact, the charm of his evening receptions, - or rather "smoke-talks...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Scribner's Magazine. | 10/27/1891 | See Source »

...fell to crew 2. Crew 8 took in Whiteside to steer for them, and Fay coxswained crew 9. Crew 8 had the inside course, crew 2 next, and crew 9 outside. Crew 2 took the lead and finished half a length a lead. It was rather dark to distinguish which of the other two was ahead. Mr. Kennedy, the referee, thought that crew 8 was ahead. The winning crew was composed of R. Wheatland '95. Shreve, N. Hayward '95, and J. T. Kilbreth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Four-Oared Scratch Races. | 10/23/1891 | See Source »

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