Word: notes
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...northern intercollegiate league game of the season with Cornell in the Stadium this afternoon, at 4 o'clock. H. A. A. tickets will admit, or tickets at 50 cents each may be obtained at the gate. In connection with the recent discussion of gate receipts, it is interesting to note that the management has distributed 2000 complimentary tickets...
...announced last Friday that a gift of $250,000 had been donated to Princeton for the erection of a freshman dormitory. That there should be a need for such an institution at a university so closely knit together as Princeton is worthy of note in its bearing on our own situation. It has only been against the opposition of the College authorities that the Senior class for the past few years has been able to take for itself three buildings at the north end of the Yard, and the future of the Senior dormitory scheme is by no means assured...
...interesting, in the midst of the most heated athletic discussion in which we have yet been plunged, to note the enviable serenity of our rivals. The Yale Daily News, in commenting upon the subject now foremost in all our minds, sums up the Yale position as follows: "At Yale the situation has never been much in doubt. The Faculty as a rule leaves the decision of athletic questions in the hands of the undergraduates, who would object very strongly to any curtailment of the various athletic schedules." And even if the Yale faculty did not do so, the undergraduates would...
...James Ford Rhodes, LL.D., delivered a lecture last night in Emerson Hall on the great historian, Edward Gibbon. As Mr. Rhodes is himself an historian of considerable note, this criticism was of especial interest...
...desire to call attention to a peculiar manner in which certain ambitious students are endeavoring to secure a generous return on their investment for membership in the Union. These thrifty individuals are consuming vast quantities of writing paper stamped with the Union crest, in writing theses and taking notes. Possibly these offenders are acting through ignorance, but we are quite sure that their own note paper would never be used for such a purpose. Is the slight saving in stationers' bills sufficient compensation for the loss of self-respect which can but accompany such a petty breach of good taste...