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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Computations have been made at the Observatory on a new asteroid discovered last summer at Arequipa, Peru. These computations prove that its daily motion around the sun is very large, showing it to be nearer the sun than any asteroid previously studied. It has been found to have a greater ellipticity than any other similar body...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Observatory News. | 11/16/1901 | See Source »

...today for the final rehearsal of the songs before the Dartmouth game tomorrow. The songs will first be sung in the Union and there will be special coaching in the singing of "The Marseillaise," which is to be the leading song at the Yale game. It has been found impossible to hold open football practice, but there will be an open air rehearsal nevertheless. It is hoped that all men will at once learn the first and last songs on the list. All men who have not received copies of the songs may get them at the Union...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Rehearsal of Songs. | 11/15/1901 | See Source »

...been found necessary to postpone the sale of tickets for the special football night performance at Keith's until Monday afternoon, because of conflict of hours with the song rehearsal, the graded crews race and the class football game...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Sale of Football Night Tickets Postponed. | 11/15/1901 | See Source »

...should be a matter of honor that no tickets allowed to a Harvard undergradute be found in the hands of speculators. The Harvard sections are for the exclusive use of Harvard men and their friends, and in order to prevent any violation of the above rule, the management hereby gives notice that it will print the names of those whose seats are found in the hands of speculators. The row, section and number of each application is kept on file at the office...

Author: By O. H. Schweppe., | Title: Warning Against Sale of Yale Game Tickets. | 11/12/1901 | See Source »

...question of divine power in the world, he said, which was filling the Greek mind when Paul made his sublime speech to the Athenians from Mars Hill, in which are found the words of the text. The Greeks had been imagining, just as men have always imagined, what forces ruled this world, and in their anxiety to reverence every divine power, they had erected an altar "to an unknown god." It was this god that Paul so marvelously described to them. His conception, familiar to all of us today, of the one all-powerful, all-loving God, was simply...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Rev. Buckley's Sermon. | 11/11/1901 | See Source »

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