Word: ten
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Yale library has received a gift of ten thousand dollars by the will of Mr. George Gabriel, a resident of New Haven. The Theological school received five thousand from the same source...
...list of Yale junior appointments has been announced. The class averages stand unusually high, and the number of men who obtained philosophical orations is larger than that of any class for ten years. Following are the appointments: Philosophical orations-Atterbury, T. Bartlett, Bowden, Jr., Bushnell, Coxe, Glicksman, Gruener, Kingsbury, Mendel, Smith, Thatcher and Twombly. High orations-Bancroft, Didingham, Drew, Estill, Howland, Loomis, Pangborn, Slade, H. K. Smith, Shaw, Tweedy. Orations-C. M. Brown, F. T. Brown, Crawford, Cushing, Danner, Dickey, Ely, Gage, Graves, McClung, Thurber, Ryder, Tucker. Dissertations-G. I. Adams, Foster, T. S. Hart, Kernochan, Leverett, Noyes, Moyle. First...
...chorus of students which was invited to help lead the singing in the Grand Opera House at the first two of the eight or ten religious meetings to be held there Sunday evenings, was found to be of great assistance. Rev. Frederick Palmer who has the personal direction of these meetings, and Rev. Frederick B. Allen, superintendent of the Boston Episcopal City Mission, have again requested that the students continue their help. The meetings are very similar to the Globe theatre services of two years ago, and the managers should have the hearty support of the college in their endeavor...
...Eight or ten well-formed men are wanted to act as peasants in the Norsk Fest-day, an entertainment descriptive of Norwegian life, to be given Thursday afternoon, January 30, at the Boston Theatre, in aid of the Charity Club Free Hospital for Women, of which Mrs. Robert Treat Paine is one of the directors. Harvard men who would be willing to act in this capacity may learn full particulars by calling at Hayden's the customer, on Washington street, any afternoon this week...
Over one hundred and ten men have been tried for the Ninety-three crew, more then twice the usual number, but it does not appear that the unusual number has produced unusual material. The men do not seem to row very well nor do they look very strong. Although they have not been told to row hard, they do not exhibit enough snap in their work. They have been so far rowing with their arms straight without sliding. No men have shown themselves so good as be sure of a place on the sight and changes are made almost daily...