Word: non
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...justice, have no right to insist that the tests of other churches are the same as those of our own. To any Christian organization perfect loyalty must be extended, for it is our duty to reach out to everybody as a Christian. Neither must we condemn a non church-going man. Often he cannot understand the forms of the church and stays away; yet he believes implicitly in Christ and wants him for a friend. For him there is no real need of all that is outward and formal but he must cleave to the right and shun wrong with...
...wish to call particular attention to a clause which Manager Hill has inserted in the notice of the sale of tickets for the Yale game. This is to the effect that graduates now pursuing courses in any department of the University will not be allowed the privileges of non-resident graduates in purchasing seats. The object of making a special sale is to give graduates who live at a distance and cannot conveniently be present at the general sale, a chance to secure seats ahead of the public. It is only fair however that those graduates now in the University...
LEWIS D. HILL, Manager.366 Harvard Street.N. B. The word "graduates" as used above means strictly non-resident graduates. Graduates now at the University must get their tickets with undergraduates at the general sale...
...ratio of college graduates who are mentioned in "Appleton's Cyclopaedia" to those that are not thus mentioned is one to forty, while that of non college men who are mentioned to those who are not, is about one to ten thousand. The number of graduates from the leading colleges is as follows: Harvard, 883; Yale, 713; Princeton, 319; Dartmouth 208; Cornell, 198; Brown, 189; Union, 188; Pennsylvania, 175; Williams, 157; Bowdoin 104; Amherst. 102. These are but very few of the facts. The table is so arranged that it shows the percentage of the different professions, and furnishes much...
Some dissatisfaction has been expressed by graduates in the Law School that no notice of the graduate sale of tickets for the Princeton game was published in the CRIMSON. This sale was intended only for non-resident alumni. It is reasonable that graduates now in the University should take their chances with the other students. The purpose in holding a special sale of this kind is not to give graduates in Cambridge special privileges over the student body. It aims only to afford an opportunity to alumni who are too far away from college to attend the regular sale...