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This success is due largely to the type of program that the Club offers. Breaking away, for the most part, from the time-worn college Glee Club rah-rah program, the organization presents selections from the greatest of modern choral numbers. It caters to the taste of true music lovers and endeavors to raise the standards of male choral work in the West, thus doing for the Coast what Harvard has done for the East. For its popular concerts it has prepared a program of lighter numbers and carries with if soloists, stunt men, and a complete college orchestra. This...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 3/4/1921 | See Source »

...Junior canes are on sale at the Houston Club. Juniors since time immemorial have exercised their privilege to carry canes during this week. Don't call a University tradition rah-rah stuff. Don't think that you will be conspicuous because of your cane. If the class works as a unit, you will be far more conspicuous without...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 11/12/1919 | See Source »

This year the Yard has been frequently troubled by "rah! rah!" riots. Rhinehart nights with their accompaniment of broken windows and smashed furniture, have been very much in favor. On one occasion, according to reports, the members of a "rough-house" went so far as to attempt hazing Freshmen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: VIOLATING TRADITIONS. | 3/1/1919 | See Source »

...keep in the background. So far, this year's extra hospitality has been misspent for, instead of appreciating such kindness, the underclassman has taken the attitude that no activity, college or social, can exist without him. And so, haughty and proud of his supposed fame, like the "rah-rah boy" posters, pipe in mouth, he struts through the Yard sometimes even condescending to answer the greeting of the upperclassman. To say that this is true of all present Freshmen is of course absurd. There are many who stick to old traditions and behave as they should, but these pass unnoticed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FRESHMAN PROBLEM | 3/2/1918 | See Source »

...Freshman comes to feel that he has at last reached a grown-up institution and that it is up to him to put away childlike things. Very often his illusions of what a college ought to be are shattered. Gone are the Ralph Henry Barbarism of "frattiness" and the "rah-rah" spirit. He must even desert the "campus" for the more prosaic Yard. Usually the illusion is broken in a few months, and he begins to accept complacently and finally with satisfaction,--Pharasaical, if you will,--that this college is different...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BRIGHT COLLEGE DAYS. | 2/15/1916 | See Source »

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