Word: loudnesses
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...pattern, and in his hand carried a crush hat. The two sides were distinguished by a bit of ribbon in the button-hole of each man; the Yale men as of old, wore light blue; the Harvard men, pale pink, crimson having been discarded long before as being too loud. The ball used was perfectly round, about half the size of a Rugby, and covered with velvet of delicate tint...
...outgrown respectable limits. Public decency calls for a reform. The prosperity of many papers that live by telling the truth in a truthful and respectable manner, shows that there are classes that can distinguish between journalism and newspaperism, and that a financial existence does not necessarily depend on loud type and high sounding distorting headings. The public press should study to elevate public taste and not lower its own standing by catering to the morbid desires of Tom, Dick, and Harry...
...call attention once more to the conduct of men who use the reading-room in the library as a place for discussion and conversation. There are two men in particular, - we could name them if we wished to, - who regularly disturb half the room every morning by their loud discussions on athletics and recitations. We have often remarked on the selfishness of such conduct which is all the more inexcusable as the reading-room is to many men the only place in college where they are able to secure anything like absolute quiet. To such men, noise and laughter...
...Bradley, C. C. Burnett, A. D. Claflin, M. S. Latham, G. C. Adams, L. Lincoln, G. L. Peabody, W. Howe, W. L. Smith, E. E. Hamlin, J. A. Frye, F. D. Fisk; juniors, D. W. Bowles, H. A. Buck, F. S. Coolidge, R. P. Fisk, C. E. Loud, T. N. Rhinelander, J. L. Snelling, A. W. Wheelwright, F. Remington, W. Endicott, W. Wetherbee, T. P. Burgess, H. W. Keyes, G. Higginson, H. L. Clark...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON. - Those students who use the "stack" of the library for special work are greatly annoyed by needless noise and conversation. On yesterday morning two students made themselves generally obnoxious by discussing in a loud voice, their maximum terms for tutoring. There were at this time many students in the "stack" who were trying to make the most of a special privilege. Cannot this protest receive the support of public opinion? Surely students who are supposed to be worthy of special privileges, should show themselves sufficiently public spirited to regard the rights of others...