Word: numbers
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...class of 1907 will hold a smoker and reunion in the Assembly Room of the Union this evening at 9 o'clock. A large number of the class are still in the University, and with-those living in this vicinity a good attendance is expected. The arrangements for the smoker are in charge of the Class Committee, consisting of R. L. Bacon, E. L. Burnham, and R. B. Gregg...
...second trials will take place on Thursday, February 18. At the time competitors will give ten-minute speeches, again selecting the side of the question they desire. The number of competitors will be reduced to twelve. The third trial will be held on Wednesday February 24. Competitors will again present ten-minute speeches, six speaking upon the affirmative and six upon the negative. The order of speaking will be by lot. At the close of the ten-minute speeches each competitor will be required to make a rebuttal speech in accordance with suggestions given him at the time...
...University baseball schedule was announced last night. It contains 23 games including provisional games in case of ties with Princeton and Yale. This is four less than the number of games last year. No games will be played before the spring recess, the first game in Cambridge being on April...
After the recent agitation for the reduction of the number of intercollegiate contests it is interesting to compare the baseball schedule for this spring with last year's list of games. The most noticeable feature is the attempt of the management to detract as little as possible from the "scholarly interests" of the undergraduates. The number of mid-week games in Cambridge during term time has been reduced 25 per cent, because these contests caused absences from lectures. One less trip will be taken, and the total number of games will be three or four less than it was last...
...discussing entrance examinations with high school principals and others. Professor E. C. Moore, a graduate of an Ohio college, is now in Illinois on a journey through about the same district, which he undertook at the request of the Alumni Association. Assistant Dean W. R. Castle '00 delivered a number of speeches last fall on his way to Honolulu, and E. H. Wells '97, secretary of the Alumni Association, spoke throughout the whole Northwest on a trip which took him as far as the Pacific Coast. The CRIMSON and Bulletin are doing what they can to spread information, by sending...