Word: may
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...Senior class buttons will be put on sale today at Leavitt & Peirce's at 1 o'clock. All Seniors may obtain them at 25 cents each upon signing their names and addresses. The committee appointed to choose a design for the buttons adopted a diamond-shaped pin bearing the class colors of green and white in an original design of enamel...
...lectures as last year, there will be only four public lectures and eight lectures given in connection with French 6. The public lectures will be on Moliere and will be held in New Lecture Hall at 4.30 o'clock probably on April 2, 5, 9, and 12. Reserved seats may be obtained by enclosing a stamped, addressed envelope to G. K. Munroe, 68 Mt. Auburn street, Cambridge, before February 1. M. Lefrane is professor of langue et litterature francais modernes in the College de France and directeur adjoint at the Ecole pratique des Hautes Etudes...
...Union, has been set for Thursday, February 18, the first Thursday after the mid-years. To avoid confusion in regard to tickets and boxes all Juniors, expecting to attend the dance, who are not at present members of the Union, are advised to join at once. Membership may still be charged on the next term-bill...
...meets, instead of in monthly series, as in other years. The first meet will take place in the baseball cage next Thursday afternoon at 3.30 o'clock and will be open to all members of the University. Medals will be awarded to the winners in each event. Entries may be made in the blue-book at the Locker Building beginning with today until 6 P. M. Wednesday. After this meet there will be no more practice in field events until January 5, when both track and field candidates will begin vigorous practice and strict training. The second handicap meet will...
...Monthly opens fitly with tributes to President Eliot from three men of note, Ambassador Bryce, President Hadley of Yale, and President Wilson of Princeton. On these follows "A Leaf of Bay," a simple and musical two-stanza ode in praise of a warrior who has conquered and may now rest. The collocation suggests that the allusion is to President Eliot, who certainly will watch the young men with undiminished interest as they "look toward the fight," but whether he will be content to rest "careless of the war about" is doubtful. The other pieces of verse show differing degrees...