Word: reached
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...followed by a reception at the home of R. H. Merriam, '90. The concert at Minneapolis will come Saturday, at the Hennepin Avenue Theatre, after which there will be a reception by W. D. Washburn, Jr., '88. A special train will take the clubs to Denver which they will reach Monday afternoon. After the concert that evening the clubs will be banquetted by the Yale Alumni Association of Denver. New Year's day will be spent in Denver, and a second concert given that evening. On Wednesday there will be a concert at Kansas City with a reception...
...would request, in behalf of the men in the courses, that the time be changed to an earlier date. There are many men who, usually faithful in attendance at the lectures, are accustomed to leave college a few days before the expiration of the term. This enables them to reach home a few days before Christmas instead of at Christmas Eve. There are but few men who cannot as well spare these last few days from study; an hour examination compels them to loaf around Cambridge, thinking of home until they have satisfied their own consciences and the exactions...
...education, that here at Harvard, they will find pleasant acquaintances, and agreeable surroundings. We comment upon this dinner because we believe it to be a step in the right direction; a step which will tend to bring those men to Harvard whom we must have if we desire to reach that standard which we have set up for ourselves...
...have been brought before the association at a special meeting convened for that purpose. If Yale can claim any glory from a championship won, as has been the case this year, well and good. It was like the claim of forfeit when a team had been unable to reach its destination on account of the breaking down of a train, or a detention of some nature. Harvard has a good eleven. The Harvards played their game with the Princetons on the grounds of the latter, and not on neutral territory, as was the case with the Princeton and Yale game...
...topics have not infrequently been necessary simply because a student could not get at the information he wanted. Therefore we suggest that two copies of each magazine, certainly of the more important ones, should be taken by the library. Then one copy can always be reserved and in reach of the students, while the other may be taken out as heretofore. We trust that this very reasonable suggestion may not fall on barren ground. No hindrances should be cast in the path of a student of Harvard college which the expenditure of a few dollars might dispense with...