Word: ten
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...second trial of speakers for the Princeton debate will be held in the Fogg Lecture Room this evening. There will be ten-minute speeches on either side of the question, and six men will be retained for the final trial. The following men, chosen at the first trial, will speak: J. K. Clark 3L., T. H. Reed 2L., G. M. Nichols sL., E. E. Smith '02, I. Grossman '02, E. H. Letchworth '02, O.J. Campbell '03, S. Blaikie '03, G. Bettman '03, A. Black '03, G. Clark '03, M. Hale...
...costing fifty-five pounds. The collection also includes a number of books written by authors contemporaneous with Swift, relating to him. The most valuable of these books are a bound volume of the "Drapier Letters" and two volumes of the first edition of "Gulliver's Travels." Both works cost ten guineas each. The volume of the "Drapier Letters" is particularly interesting as it contains the very first editions of the "Letters" published, only a few of which are now in existence. The books, with a few exceptions, were published between the years...
...select the team to represent Harvard. At the first trial, which will be held in Sever 11 on Monday, February 14, at 7 o'clock, any member of the University will be allowed to speak five minutes upon either side of the question, and the judges will retain ten or twelve men for the second trial. This will be held on Thursday, February 20, at 7 o'clock, and will consist of ten minute speeches. Six men will be retained for the final trial, which will be held on Tuesday, February 25, and will be conducted in the form...
...Library during the year are placed at 24,238, of which more than half were received at Gore Hall and about one-fourth at the Law School. The number of volumes added to Gore Hall is less than in the two previous years, but exceeds the average of the ten years preceding (10,731) by about 3,000 volumes. The total number of volumes received by the library in the past three years is only a little less than the total of the previous five years...
...other table compares the results at Yale and Princeton, the competitive games being confined to football and baseball. Here again, if the whole period be considered together, Yale, which has been the most successful in the sports, has gained in the ten years a much smaller percentage than Princeton, so far as the college and scientific school freshman classes are concerned. In this table, however, the fluctuations in the size of the freshman classes correspond rather better with the fluctuations of victory and defeat than they do in the Harvard-Yale table. The figures for the scientific schools of Yale...