Word: small
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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During the year twenty-eight different clubs have used the various rooms of the Union. The small Sophomore class dinners, the class smokers, and the Round Table dinners have likewise been held there as in past years; and the Sophomore class, following the lead of the class of 1910, held a pop night in the Living Room in place of the annual class dinner. This year the Juniors instituted a new scheme of having, instead of one of the class smokers, a Strawberry Night, which proved highly successful. The Junior Union Dance, the Faculty Reception and the reception to President...
...CRIMSON publishes in the Class Day issue a list of all Seniors with their probable occupations. This list is made up from the address and occupation cards which the Secretary has sent to all members of the class. The 1909 list will be ridiculously small unless a great many more cards are sent in before the end of the week. Postals returned to the Secretary today will be included in the list. A. G. CABLN, Secretary...
...CRIMSON publishes in the Class Day issue a list of all Seniors with their probable occupations. This list is made up from the address and occupation cards which the Secretary has sent to all members of the class. The 1909 list will be ridiculously small unless a great many more cards are sent in before the end of the week. Postals returned to the Secretary before Saturday, June 19, will be included in the list. A. G. CABLE, Secretary...
...abolition of managership competitions, there can be no two views on athletic subscriptions. The beginning of each College year witnesses the visitations of swarms of collectors, who infest all quarters of Cambridge, making themselves objectionable everywhere. Things have come to such a pass that upperclassmen, realizing the small part subscriptions play in supporting the teams, seldom receive the collectors with civility, and still more seldom with charity. The baffled harpies are driven to "bleeding" guileless Freshmen, haunting their rooms during the first two or three days in order to catch them before the first installments of allowances are exhausted...
...works as a warning, just when encouragement would be in the highest interest of the University. If such a canvass became influential, we should rapidly come to a point where only the immediately "useful" courses would be well attended and all the other courses would be confined to the small number of undergraduates who specialize in the field. Some of us believe that just the opposite is desirable for college work