Word: needed
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Monday evening the Shakspere Club will upon it undertake a task which is second in its difficulty only to the representation of Oedipus Tyrannus. Great labor has been expended upon the stage fittings of the play, and if success is deserved by hard and conscientious work the Shakspere Club need not fear for the success of their great venture. The peculiar formation of the stage in Sanders was found to be a great drawback to an easy utilization of the entire space, and it was only by employing a frieze to conceal the supports of the music loft that...
...courses for upper-classmen are: In German one, a half course which is for "practice in writing and speaking German," and which will satisfy a need that has long been felt by the less advanced students of German; in Political Economy, one; in History, two, and in Mathematics, three. The new course in German, numbered 9, will doubtless prove very successful and popular. Conducted by Prof. Bartlett, it is a great addition to the German department. The new courses, Political Economy 10 and History 20, open only to graduates and other students of advanced standing, are destined to be very...
...score of 12 to 4 made against the Blue, and 15 to 5 scored in the match with Amherst. Truly, our nine has brought honors to the college, and the honors it has received from us are hard earned and well deserved. With our present record we need feel but little fear that any other place than Holmes Field will witness the unfurling of next year's championship pennant...
...true that the expenses of the club have been heavy, but a plan which has proved so successful in the past ought not to be dismissed without consideration. Inasmuch as the character of the representation promises to be of such a high order of excellence, there can be no need to fear a loss of patronage through this plan, as none but students need be allowed admission. Thus these students who desired the presence of their friends would, financially, counterbalance the students who, through the dress rehearsal be kept from attending a regular representation. The presence of the students would...
...cents an afternoon, more or less, for the use of the new tennis courts. This in itself is not much, but if one plays every afternoon it soon mounts up to a very respectable sum. While realizing the fact that the Tennis Association is in need of money to pay for the new courts and to keep them in order, which last is a very considerable item in the case of the clay courts, would not the constant player be given some advantage over the man who plays perhaps half a dozen times a year? In the base-ball games...