Word: tho
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...morrow to determine upon a vacation, it is supposed that we shall not have any fall vacation, but to include it in the winter, it is likewise supposed that we shall have a vacation to begin in December and continue through the winter (!), but it is conjecture only, tho' I think with a great degree of probability; for I am sure it will be impossible for us to remain here during the winter. For you can not look a man in the face without a dollar, board four dollars a week, candles one-half pr. lb., wine and rum which...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON: - We hear much of the energy with which Yale men support their college teams in each and every branch of athletics; and contrasts, invidious to Harvard, tho' inexact are often drawn between this college and Yale. I have even heard it said that we take too little interest in our teams, that our athletic enthusiasm is not remarkable, that we are - oh! blackest crime, indifferent...
...never sent for that purpose to the colony of Connecticut least he should imbibe in his youth that low craft and cunning so incident to the people of that country, which is so interwoven in their constitutions that all their art cannot disguise it from the World, tho' many of them under the Sanctifyed Garb of Religion have endeavored to impose themselves on the World for honest...
...Natural History Society has elected tho following officers for 1886-87: president, W. W. Nolen; senior vice president, W. McM. Woodsworth; junior vice-president, R. P. Bigelow; recording secretary, T. W. Harris; corresponding secretary, Prof. W. M. Davis; treasurer, J. A. Bailey; librarian, F. H. Sellers; curator of Zoology H. A. Lothrop; curator of Botany; R. P. Bigelow; curator of Mineralogy and Geology, G. W. Rolfe...
...concert of the two musical clubs last evening attracted an audience larger than was ever known before within the memory of any present undergraduate, but it was no more than the excellence of the performance deserved. An unusually large share of the work fell to tho Pierian, a fact which was gratifying, as it showed that greater confidence is now felt in the ability of the instrumentalists. The performance of this part of the programme was quite up to the usual standard. The "Turkish March" by Beethoven was particularly well received. The effect of the "Pizzicato Polka" was somewhat marred...