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...University and the active support of a very considerable number. It is most appropriate that once a year at least the men not directly connected with the work should have the opportunity to show their interest by joining with those who are constantly endeavoring to make Brooks House a live centre for religious and philanthropic activity. It is particularly fortunate that the service tonight can be a tribute to such a worthy leader as Phillips Brooks...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE COMMEMORATIVE SERVICE IN BROOKS HOUSE. | 1/23/1911 | See Source »

These men are not entered as a team representing the University as the meet is held as a round robin tournament. This meet is open to men interested in fencing who live in Boston, or the vicinity...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: B. A. A. Fencing Meet Tonight | 1/13/1911 | See Source »

...Yard for the Senior year appeals to some men because it is inexpensive, to others because it is pleasant and to a few because it is a direct means of increasing the spirit of class unity and intimate friendship. All three reasons are valid. It is cheaper to live in the Yard than anywhere else except pigeon-hole private houses on the back streets. It is more informal, more centralized, more suited to the nature of Senior year and in every way more attractive than a come-and-go existence in the scattered sleeping places on Mt. Auburn street...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yard Dormitories. | 1/11/1911 | See Source »

...hoped that every man in the Junior class will see the many advantages which may be obtained by rooming in the College Yard through the Senior year. All the dormitories which have been reserved for Seniors will receive many improvements so that a man may live as comfortably as in any of the dormitories outside the Yard. Since the earliest days of Harvard it has been a tradition that men should live in the Yard in their Senior year. And now that we have all the improvements in the Senior dormitories there seems to be no reason why every...

Author: By R. T. Fisher ., | Title: Junior Class Notice | 1/7/1911 | See Source »

...obliged to lie awake for the space of five minutes at 7 o'clock. The mode of life at the University has so changed in recent years that many students find no occasion, whatever for rising before 8 o'clock or even later. Why then should those who live within sound of this bell be subjected to this continual nuisance? The seven o'clock clang performs no conceivable useful function and only serves to add one unnecessary discomfort to the Yard dormitories...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN OUTGROWN CUSTOM. | 12/16/1910 | See Source »