Word: signs
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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HARVARD SOUTHERN CLUB.- All members of the club who expect to attend the annual dinner Friday evening will please sign the blue-book at Leavitt and Pierce's at their earliest convenience...
...Princeton system, by which men are put on their honor and sign a pledge was spoken of, but the serious objection is that men are apt to be noisy after they have finished and so disturb the others...
...estimate of the demand felt by the resident members of the University for the proposed club. Those who have had the canvass in charge have realized the inaccuracy of the "blue-book" method of getting opinions, as there are always sure to be a certain number of men who sign their names thought lessly, to say nothing of the few who mutilate the books by writing fictitious names. Two things, however, have been made clear in conducting the present canvass: First, that no men were urged to sign the blue-books; secondly that those who did sign should...
Every man who thinks he would probably be a member of the club if it were in existence, is requested to sign one of the blue-books, in order to give the graduate committee an idea of the demand for such a club...
Blue books will be placed this morning at Leavitt and Peirce's, University Hall, Memorial Hall, the Foxcroft Club, the Scientific School and the Law School, to receive the signatures of members of the University who are in favor of the University Club project. Men who sign these blue-books do not pledge them selves to join the club if it should be started, but only to help the graduate committee to get an idea of the demand for the club...