Word: timing
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...place. The results are as follows: President, E. L. Rawson; vice-president, L. M. Greer; secretary, S. Dexter; treasurer, T. S. Beecher. The executive committee is comprised of W. K. Flint and H. H. Thorndike; election committee, C. E. Rawson, I. N. P. Stokes and J. M. Howells. Some time ago a committee was appointed to select a seal for the society and last evening their choice was submitted and unanimously adopted by the club. Members may now obtain shingles of the secretary...
...condition of the Camera club is most satisfactory to those interested in it. The club was organized with a membership of twenty five, and since that time fifteen names have been presented for membership. A dark room is being fitted up in the basement of Sever. This room is given to the club by the university. The expense of equipping the room falls upon the club; this expense is estimated at a little over two hundred dollars. It will be partially met by the rental of the lockers with which the room will be fitted; sixteen of these lockers have...
...very large audience assembled in the lecture room of the Jefferson Physical Laboratory yesterday afternoon to listen to Professor J. W. White's lecture on the Greek stage. Professor White said that of all the monuments of ancient Athens which have survived the ravages of time none is more interesting than the theatre of Dionysus. For many years the site of this theatre was not known. The greatest share of the credit of its discovery and subse quent excavation is due to the Germans. The theatre is at the southeastern extremity of the Acropolis. It was constructed on the plan...
...between the modern and Greek theatre. The Greeks went to the theatre in the morning and stayed all day. The theatre was only open for three days in the spring, on the occasion of the Dionysias festival. It was a religious duty for the people to attend at this time, as it was a period of utter abandonment to pleasure...
...chosen, J. H. Sears, '89 stated the object of the meeting. He said that for years those most deeply interested in the athletic welfare of the university had felt that ultimately all our athletic contests would be carried on with Yale only; that many Harvard men felt that the time had come for the University to consider the question seriously; and in closing he moved that a committee of five be appointed, to consist of two graduates and three undergraduates, which should have power to consider and act. The motion was seconded by Messrs. Willard and Butter. Wetmore, '89, moved...