Word: matter
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...open air concerts on the warm summer evenings. Indeed the purpose which the originators of the club had in mind was along this very line. Beginning with the year 1858 when the club was founded the main business was serenading and singing in the yard. As the matter stands now the opportunities which college men have of hearing the club without following it out of town are practically limited to three or four. We have two concerts each year in Sanders Theatre and one or more in Brattle Hall and generally a rainy one on Class Day and this...
...practically settled that the undergraduate rule which during the past few months the managers and captains of the Yale Athletic teams have been endeavoring to put in force, will be finally dropped. For two months, owing to a compromise between the supporters of the rule and their opponents, the matter has been quiet. A committee of twelve representative men of the university was appointed to draw up new constitutions and report...
...time. Last Friday night, the limit for the postponement, the committee submitted a constitution so changed as to be totally unlike the undergraduate regulations. The report will be submitted to the university for ratification next Wednesday night when a mass meeting will be called to take action on the matter. The new rule as yet has not yet been disclosed, but one of the managers said its provisions were almost identical with those adopted by Harvard about three months ago. The result of the rule will be that uniformity will be introduced into all systems of Yale athletics...
FINE ARTS 3 - The course will be reviewed this afternoon commencing at 2.15 o'clock in Roberts Hall Building, 15 Brattle Street. The review will be repeated in the evening at 7.15 o'clock. The subject matter is the same at the two reviews. Those who attend are requested to bring with them Reber's Ancient Art. Fee for either review $4. Gentlemen will confer a favor by not opening accounts for reviews...
...poorest things in the number. "Kansas Plantin" is a peculiar story and while being decidedly fanciful, is interesting and pleasing. "An Ethical Compromise" may be termed a story of "College Life" though we hesitate to believe that a Harvard professor could "conscientiously allow" such a matter as the story relates to pass unnoticed. "A True Madonna' by Paul Washburn is the best story of the number...