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Prof. Seligman has consented to act in this capacity, but Prof. Hadley has declined. If another Yale man will take his place, then Prof. Taussig will serve, if not of course it will be necessary to take both men from outside colleges. Speaker Beer it, a Dartmouth man, and President Andrews of Brown have been suggested. Nothing however can be definitely stated as yet to as precisely what men will finally act as judges. The report that C. Vrooman would not speak and that J. S. Brown L. S. would take his place has no foundation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale Debate. | 1/13/1893 | See Source »

...last year. The concert was a great success. At half past ten the Deutscher Club opened its doors to the men and received them with a hospitality never to be forgotten. About sixty men sat at a long oak table on which were served true German dishes and beer. Stories and songs gave wings to time till about mid-night when Mr. Sol. Smith Russell came in and took a seat at the table. There was no such thing as time. Mr. Russell and Harvard's funniest man took turns at telling stories and the merriment ceased only when there...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Glee Club Trip. | 1/5/1893 | See Source »

...prepared for things serious now? Of the "Two Sketches," the first is rather the more pleasing - it is happier - and there will be time enough for dismals later on. "A Fallen Idol" is good, very good in the beginning. "The dead silence of him who is drinking beer" is full of meaning. The Kodaks are rather entertaining as a whole. The first is not bad; the second, it seems to us, has not enough in it to justify its appearance in the Advocate; the third is excellent, very well worked up, though it would hardly be proper...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Advocate. | 10/3/1892 | See Source »

Saturday morning the freshmen of the party were given a breakfast by Dr. Green. Quite a large and an evidently enthusiastic party visited the great Anheuser-Bursch Brewery later in the day and were much interested in the process of beer-making. Remembering the fine time which they had at the St. Louis reception last year, the fellows turned out in a body to a reception given by Mrs. Dr. Briggs at her beautiful home on Oliver St. Nobody was disappointed; the reception was delightful in every way. The freshmen again were invited to a tea from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Glee Club Trip. | 1/5/1892 | See Source »

...heated sour meal and denied them cheese "when they sent for it and although she had it in the house." Anextra order list was in vogue, one finds, as early as 1734. "The buttery came to be a recognized department of the college, where students could purchase provisions. beer, cider and other extras, in order that they might have no excuse for frequenting the public houses and taverns in the town. The butler was authorized to sell his wares at an advance of fifty per cent. beyond the current price and from this source derived a part of his salary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: History of Harvard University. | 12/20/1890 | See Source »

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