Word: membership
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Winter Meetings will be sold by Mr. A. A. Waterman at the office of the Cooperative Society, on Friday, February 26th. The sale will begin at 9 a.m. Tickets for reserved seats will not be sold to any but members of the association who show their membership ticket; only one membership ticket can be presented at a time. There will be no reserved seats at the first meeting. Not more than five tickets in all, for reserved seats at the first two "ladies' days" (March 13 and 20) will be sold to any one member of the association...
...graduates of the Yale Law School number about 950, and among these we find 54 judges, 24 members of Congress, 85 State legislators, of whom 10 were also Speakers of the House, 5 governors, and 8 ministers to foreign courts. The present membership of the school is 68, including those studying for the degrees of M. L. and D. C. L., and the prospects for the school are very promising...
...persons who have received any degree from the university and all those who have been students in any department of the university for one year or more shall be eligible for membership. All persons desirous of becoming members may make application to the secretary of club...
...membership roll already has the following names: E. S. Gregory, F. L. Hosmer, F. J. Wing, E. A. Angell, Benjamin C. Starr, A. St. J. Newberry, Walter S. Collins. Herman Stearns, Rev. John Doane, M. E. Wagar, Charles Mitchell, Charles Benton, C. E. Gowan, Otto Mueler, Harry Edwards, C. W. Baker, J. H. McIntosh, George A. Shepard, C. F. Mabery, Howard P. Eells, R. C. Parsons, Jr., N. S. Cableigh, Henry Chisholm. It is expected that the list will be more than doubled in a short time...
...university club is by no means a new one, in fact, the matter was discussed in the old Harvard Herald some few years ago. Yet the project has many points to commend it to favorable deliberation. For instance, by forming a club of this kind with a large membership, a small assessment fee would be amply sufficient to provide many desirable features of club life, such as a good reading-room, a comfortable smoking room, and telephone and mailing facilities. We think the scheme is worthy of discussion, and we envite communications on the subject from the undergraduates...