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WORTHY TO LIVE.- There is a sofa described and illustrated in another collumn of this paper by Paine's Furniture Company, and it is such a sofa as the Sybarite had in mind when he prayed continual increase on its existence. It is a veritable study in comfort, and lucky is the household who succeeds in possessing such a superb creation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Special Notice. | 11/14/1893 | See Source »

...based on frankness and sincerity. Surely this mutual distrust and suspicion is unmanly and unsportsman like and entirely out of harmony with Yale's great moral purpose to purify athletics. All this internal disorder shows beyond question that an intercollegiate athletic league composed of more than two members cannot live in peace and harmony. There will be combinations and wire-pulling and compromise and friction as long as two or three can unite to overwhelm a third or fourth; it will be politics instead of athletics, treason and hatred instead of loyalty and good feeling...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/6/1893 | See Source »

Last winter the undergraduate rule was abopted by a mass meeting of Yale students, and Yale agreed to live up to this rule at least until the year 1894. Her object, it was represented, was to effect purity in athletics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/30/1893 | See Source »

Every man must live either by the law of wages, that is, giving just as much as you get and no more, or else by the law of love. A man who says he means to get as much out of the world as he can, and to give just as little as possible, is living by the law of selfishness, and does not really know what life is. But any man who gives everything for the world, and tries to help it as much as he can, has already eternal life, for he is living...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Appleton Chapel. | 10/23/1893 | See Source »

This club was orginally organized for the purpose of satisfying the needs of students who did not live in the city, and from this small beginning it has gradually developed until it has now become a positive necessity to a large portion of the University students. Not only does it enable students of limited means to live more cheaply and better than they could otherwise, but it also offers an opportunity for work to those who desire it. The table service is performed by students whose hours of labor are determined by the governing board of the club...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Foxcroft Club. | 10/6/1893 | See Source »