Word: displaying
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Dates: during 1900-1900
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...will be opened at 12 o'clock. Half an hour should be allowed to reach the grounds from the trains at the New Haven Station. All trolley cars at the station run direct to College Green and the New Haven House. Cars which run to Yale Field will plainly display the sign. "To Yale Field," and will run at intervals of thirty seconds from the corner of Church and Chapel streets. There will be a separate entrance to each of the stands. To avoid any trouble that may be caused through counterfeit tickets, the management, which has a complete record...
...Observatory is making extensive preparations for observing the meteoric shower which is expected on Nov. 14, 15, and 16. In spite of the failure in preceding years a fine display is hoped...
...rear of the ground floor there will be a corridor, separated from the exhibition hall by Doric columns supporting the corridor of the upper floor, on which is a similar series of Ionic columns. A large lecture room, a stereopticon gallery, a smaller lecture room, a room for the display of working models and building materials, a coat room, three small rooms for instructors, and a janitor's room, will occupy the remainder of the space on the ground floor...
...rest of the building will be devoted to an exhibition room and to a studio, with special facilities for portrait work. Club meetings and prize contests will be held in the exhibition room, which will also serve as a general meeting place and as a gallery for the display of the best work done annually by members of the club. The most important part, however, will be the studio. It is almost impossible to secure proper light and shade effects for good portrait work, without the aid of a properly arranged sky-light and curtains, and obviously such...
...seems not unreasonable that better things should be expected in the Advocate than such a story as "Only Twice." The incident which the story develops seems hardly possible in the mind of the ordinary undergraduate, and any possible merit in construction certainly does not justify such a lengthy display of cheap and unhealthy sentiment. The poetry is better than usual. "Saint Catherine of the Oratory," by B. Fortescue, moves easily, and is simple, almost too simple, in fact. The other verses, "Street Songs," by W. Stevens, are of a higher level. The writer shows good dramatic power, having even...