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...total seating capacity of 1450, almost equal to the present number of students; the large lecture rooms will seat nearly three hundred men each. The lighting arrangements are excellent, the small basement rooms being better lighted than most of the college buildings. The heating and ventilating system is perfect; in the cellar an enormous fan changes the air in every room in the building once in ten minutes, while the electric system makes the temperature self-regulating...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yale's New Recitation Hall. | 1/11/1890 | See Source »

...some disputed Points in the Construction of edei, chren, etc., with the Infinitive, by William W. Goodwin. Notes on Quintilian, by George M. Lane. Some Latin Etymologies, by James B. Greenough. On Egregium Publicum' (Tac. Ann. III. 70. 4), by Clement Lawrence Smith. On the use of the Perfect Infinitive in Latin with the Force of the Present, by Albert A. Howard. Plutarch perienthumias, by Harold N. Fowler. Vitruviana, by George M. Richardson. The Social and Domestic Position of Women in Aristophanes, by Herman W. Haley...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. | 12/7/1889 | See Source »

...habits of life are well formed, and probably very few changes in them will take place here. It may be as well to make a few dogmatic statements concerning them. It has been shown beyond question by the experience of the great military schools in Germany, where supervision is perfect, that the early use of tobacco is altogether bad, though it has far less influence in some than in others. In regard to alcohol, German testimony is more conflicting; and beer is still given in the military schools, but there is little doubt that its effect is injurious rather than...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: College Conference Meeting. | 12/4/1889 | See Source »

...freshmen eleven had a perfect day for their game at New Haven Saturday. It was a little too cold for the comfort of spectators, however, and the number of people in attendance was smaller than it usually...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard '93, 35; Yale '93, 12. | 12/2/1889 | See Source »

...Peabody, the organist introduced the Cantata with a magnificent rendering of the Hallelujah chorus from Beethoven's Mount of Olives. The recitative with which the cantata began was finely given by Richardson of the St. Paul's choir. The Chant of Young Men was especially good and in perfect harmony. The soprano voices of the boys in the Chant of Maidens and Children were also remarkably fine and sweet. The whole cantata was sung clearly and sweetly without at any time an instant's hesitation. The two choirs sang as if they had been long trained together, and the whole...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Vesper Service. | 11/27/1889 | See Source »

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