Word: phase
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...missionary meeting this evening. As Mr. Gailey is known, not only as a strong Christian man, but as a leading athlete, being last year in the judgment of Caspar Whitney the best football centre in the country, he should meet with a hearty reception. He will speak on some phase of the religious work in China, whither he is to go in the spring as a missionary. The meeting is at 6.45 in Holden Chapel, and open to all members of the University...
...Hyde '98, and A. Washburn 1900, were appointed a literary committee to have entire charge of literary matters. They are expected to provide lectures for the first few meetings of the Verein, and to arrange for the systematic study thenceforth of some German play, or other phase of German literature. The next meeting of the Verein will be held on December...
...Lampoon which will be put on sale this evening contains an entertaining aggregation of Freshman jokes and even one thrust at the swaggering Sophomore with his new pipe. The centre page well illustrates a real phase of Freshman life and some of the other sketches are creditable. Perhaps the most successful attempt is a take-off on the poetry of Kipling and his admirers. Several stray hits are scattered throughout the number and a wandering member of the University is welcomed back and his exploits rehearsed in a manner truly dazzling and wonderful, but scarcely appreciable by the college...
...considering the narrower phase of his subject-public speaking in the university-Mr. Lehmann spoke of the universities with which he had been most intimately acquainted-Oxford and Cambridge. In these two universities, interest in public speaing and debating is represented by the Union Debating Societies, open to all members of the two institutions. Having survived the prejudice which they at first awakened, they are today a most influential factor in English university life. Each society has a club-house, containing rooms for debating and reading, beside dining halls and rooms for social meetings. The weekly debates attract great numbers...
...arts of the Renaissance are practically exhaustive. Every facility for leisurely examination and note taking is afforded at all hours of the day and from 7 to 9 in the evening. So that a student may always find here abundant material for the study of any phase of art in which he may be interested. It is hoped that members of the University may find the Museum a pleasant and instructive place of resort...