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Sophomores. Savage-Gulick; Matthews-Slattery; Price Greenleaf-C. H. Page, Wright, Mix; Matthews-Powers, Babbitt, C. N. Brown; Bowditch-Cannon, K. B. Emerson, H. I. Cummings, Burr, E. O. Parker, Parsons; Whitney-Phinney, Chittenden; Bartlett-W. Reed; Derby-Chester; Levina Hoar-G. D. Bussey; Slade-J. A. Parker; G. Thomas-J. W. Rice; Merrick-Weyse; Rogers-J. E. Johnson; Lowell, Finlay; Sever-Sever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Scholarship. | 10/11/1888 | See Source »

...Mix, C. L., 102 Ellery street...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Freshman Class. | 10/18/1887 | See Source »

...editors-in-chief in the papers, and so there can be no fixed policy in the conduct of athletics or anything else. One man builds his plan out and disappears; another succeeds him and grafts his own ideal on to his predecessor's relicts, so to say, and, to mix metaphors, the result is a very patchwork of policy - likest a crazy-quilt, Queen Anne's cottage, than any other product of the same human mind. Hence, too, the impossibility of the strictest economy. The bucket changes hands so often and so rapidly, and each carries it so differently from...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The University Club. | 3/15/1887 | See Source »

...Bachelor of Science and Bachelor of Philosophy had studied little or no Greek, more rarely no Latin. In no case did the degree claim to represent even a minimum of culture. In this sense all degrees were and always will be more or less indefinite. But let us not mix up two things that are so easily kept separate, and which ought to be so kept. All experience proves that now and then a student only wastes time by trying to learn a foreign language, and that he may nevertheless attain a fair degree of scholarship in other departments. Some...

Author: By Chas. W. Super., | Title: The Degree of A. B. | 2/5/1887 | See Source »

...account of his general invitation published in our columns being misunderstood; the few who attended, however, had a most delightful time. All our readers who heard Dr. Hale's address at the opening of chapel will remember that he regretted that "we old fellows," as he put it, "cannot mix more intimately with you young fellows;" and this is the way he proposes to remedy it - by giving informal receptions once a week, at which all men in the college will be made welcome. Receptions of this kind at Yale, though usually given by the president there, account...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/13/1886 | See Source »

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