Word: rule
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...prevailing color should be red, or crimson, the college color, rather than blue. It has always been the aim of the Harvard men in the torch light processions to make their dress as odd and striking as possible ; the class uniforms this year are no exception to this rule. Now a zouave uniform (the uniform which has been proposed for the drum corps) may certainly be pretty and tasty, but there is nothing funny or inceptive about it. A number of organizations will undoubtedly wear zouave uniforms, though perhaps not of the same colors as have been proposed for that...
...been found that several of the men entered for the freshman sports have not yet been examined by Dr. Sargent as they are required to be by a rule of the college. In order to allow time for this, the meeting has been postponed until Thursday...
...some beautiful passes and long throws to the half backs. After eleven, the of the latter and the University team began to teach the '88 men how to play. The Freshmen team, as it practiced yesterday, showed some very good material, the men being well built as a rule, and not light. They were : Porter, full back ; Fargo and Holden, half backs ; Osgood, quarter back ; and Balch, Brancroft, Woodman, Churchill, Fuller, Purdon, Homans and Thomas, rushers. There was one extra man to make up for the supposed weakness. The ball was kept at the freshmen end of the field most...
...events which will help to make this year a memorable one in student estimation is the new rule lately passed by the faculty, by which upperclassmen are given the privilege of substituting some optional course for conditions on certain. courses of freshman work, notably the required work in mathematics. To say that this radical change has been hailed with enthusiasm by the students most concerned in its operation is but a mild statement. As far back as student memory reaches, the mathematics of freshman year has been a thorn in the flesh to generations of incoming classes. It is almost...
...that night. Transparencies ought to be as thick as flies upon the wall. This special feature of torchlight processions has always been carried to the highest state attainable by the Harvard men of former years, and it is hoped that this year will be no exception to the rule. If sufficient money is raised the committee will be enabled to provide a large stock of fireworks to be set off along the line of march, something which will add much to the splendor of the affair. Private parties and clubs will doubtless indulge also in fireworks, and altogether the town...