Word: tree
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...event will suffer. The success of Class Day, however, will be the most seriously endangered. The Seniors, of course, will stay in Cambridge, but large numbers of Juniors and lower classmen, whose presence here is highly desirable, will go to the race. The cheering of the classes at the Tree will be feeble, from lack of numbers; the preponderance of girls at the spreads and elsewhere will be appalling, and there may even be difficulty in securing Junior ushers...
...accordingly particularly anxious to see this one. Moreover, Class Day itself would be necessarily more or less of a failure owing to the absence of a great many Seniors and of a large proportion of the under-class men whose presence would be essential to the success of both Tree Exercises and Senior Dance...
...Class Day Committee earnestly request any member of the class who can draw to submit designs for Yard, Memorial, and Tree tickets for Class Day, June 25. Designs must be submitted before April first...
...before, the interval between this and the dance will be the most natural time for many of the spreads which have heretofore come on Class Day and have made the day too crowded. At the same time the Class Day exercises proper, comprising the exercises at Sanders Theatre, the Tree Exercises, and the illumination of the Yard in the evening, will remain the same as in former years...
...Senior class decided by a large majority, at its meeting last evening, to keep the old Tree. The exercises around it will be modified, however. The flowers will be placed around the Tree extending from five to eight feet from the ground and into them the '97 emblem will be woven. The men will wear ordinary clothes, probably a uniform costume to be recommended by the Class Day Committee, and the scrimmage will not be rough. The seats will be limited to about 3400. Five schemes were proposed, the first of which was adopted. Two of the others were those...