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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...appears that "hazing" is, after all, an exotic imported from the Parisian ateliers, where the students indulge in such ferocious tricks on new pupils that death has several times been the result. It was an occurrence of this kind that caused the atelier of Paul Delaroche to be closed when that master went to Italy, taking his pupil Gerome with him. The rising Russian painter, Basile Vereschagin, on entering the studio of Picot to learn the rudiments of his art, refused to be made the victim of the rough treatment to which it was proposed to subject him. This consisted...
...fall meeting of 1881 Machado, '83, was elected captain, and it was decided to play for the college championship. For this purpose the team went to New York, where a series of games was played on the Polo Grounds with the following result...
...lacrosse now began to boom. On Feb. 23, 1882, it was voted to "invite the lacrosse associations of Princeton, New York University and Columbia to meet in New York city," but this meeting was delayed until today, when the delegates are expected to meet in Cambridge, and the result, it may be hoped, will make this a "red letter day" in the history of the game...
...meeting of the captain and president of the Yale Boat Club with the graduate committee of our Boat Club comes off today at New London. The result of this meeting will be awaited with interest. Harvard has entrusted her cause without reservation to a graduate committee, while Yale has insisted that her captain and president shall, as heretofore, make the agreements in regard to the conditions of the race. Each university is represented as she has chosen, and it remains to be seen whether the representatives can strike an agreement...
...importance of a thorough reform in the methods at present in vogue is becoming more and more clearly recognized. That Harvard will soon find it necessary to move in the matter seems to be an idea that is daily gaining ground. Whether the outcome of any reform will result in the adoption of some modification of the "Amherst system," adapted to the larger requirements of a university, or in some totally new system, it is useless to conjecture; but that a system of ranking and of examination so stuffed with evil as the present one, and so universally condemned...