Word: lunches
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...hissing which occurred at lunch yesterday in Memorial is the third time such a disturbance has occurred this year, and it should most emphatically be the last. If some men in Memorial are determined to show the ungentlemanly side of their nature the directors of the Dining Association should make a stringent rule to meet such cases, and the next time the offenders make an exhibition of themselves, expel them from the hall. The repetition of the offense three times justifies severe measures. It is, of course, unfortunate that people are allowed to show their own bad taste by their...
...certainly should be done now. The changes in the recitation hours necessitate it. In several of the twelve o'clock lectures the instructors keep the students until nearly a quarter after one; this makes it impossible for those who have half-past one o'clock lectures to get any lunch, and makes it very inconvenient for all men in the course. The same thing is true of the courses which come the last thing in the afternoon; in many of them the students are kept from ten to fifteen minutes over the hour. Now there is not only...
SECOND ELEVEN NOTICE. - The following men will go to Exeter today. Be at Belchers at 11.45 sharp for lunch: Miller, Eddy, Steedman, J. T. Heard '92, Highlands, Davis, Pierce, Collamore, Fitzhugh, Burgess, Bardeen, McNear, Heard '95, Phelan...
...other necessary articles came in an extra passenger coach by the same train. As soon as the men were out of the cars, they all went to work transferring the baggage and freight to the Skipjack, a small steamer. The three shells were taken in tow. After a light lunch at the quarters, the crew took a short row about dark. The men are all in good spirits and put an amount of energy and snap in the rowing that indicates that this year's 'varsity crew will not be beaten without a most desperate effort on its part...
...Middle Temple, where "Twelfth Night" was first acted, and where one of the benchers took me recently; Crosby Hall, mentioned by Shakspere as Crosby Place, a stately mansion of the fifteenth century, near Bishopsgate, where I remember once some of the officers of the British Museum took me to lunch in the restaurant which has been made of its fine old hall; and this Church of St. Saviour's, with its many dramatic memories, for here also are buried Fletcher and Massinger, the last called a "stranger" in the records of burial...