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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...hours of 2-3 and 7-8 o'clock. The clothes are distributed among the poor of Boston and vicinity. Men living in private houses can get the committee's collection wagon to call later in the week by sending work to S. B. Snow, Matthews 18. In view of the fact that many laundry bundles were stolen from the dormitories last week, it is advisable that men expecting to be away at these hours should previously deliver clothing to the porter and not leave it outside their doors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: December Clothing Collection | 12/6/1899 | See Source »

...present year is characterized at the University of Pennsylvania by extraordinary activity in the direction of building. The new museums have been completed and occupied. They form a most striking addition, from an architectural point of view, to the group of university buildings, and offer abundant room for the great collections of Babylonian and Egyptian antiquities which it has hitherto bee impossible even to unpack. The biological department has completed its "Vivarium," and has filled it with all manner of beasts and creeping things, so that it has become one of the chief attractions to visitors. The law school...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pennsylvania Letter. | 12/6/1899 | See Source »

...University," Professor Hart discusses the expansion of Harvard and the interesting academic and athletic situations, and F. E. Bissell '00 writes "Student Life." Athletics, Radcliffe, the departmental reports, graduate news, articles on the Harvard Numismatic collections and the Harvard Union, and the regular notes and records, with a view of Harvard College in 1795 as the frontispiece, complete the number...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE GRADUATES' MAGAZINE. | 12/4/1899 | See Source »

...game on Saturday ended in a tie, neither side being able to score. Disappointing and unsatisfactory as the result was from one point of view, it was, for the spectator, the finest football game ever played. Under ideal conditions of weather and grounds with the attendance of the largest crowd ever assembled on Soldiers Field or on any football field, the elevens of the two oldest and best universities in the country, in perfect physical condition, struggled two hours for the collegiate championship, and finally each gave up, without victory and yet unbeaten. The Harvard eleven had fought their...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A TIE. | 11/20/1899 | See Source »

...more wit and originality than any preceding number this year. But it is prevented from being uniformly excellent by the pointless and offensive looking blot which is entitled "A short guide to Harvard University." The editorials are perhaps the best literary contributions, although the Irishman's point of view in "McGinnis at the Yale game," an imitation of Mr. Dooley, is amusing and ends pointedly. The editorial on the distribution of Yale game tickets lacks the overdone tone of previous ones and is timely, but might be improved by the omission of the play on a word in the last...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lampoon. | 11/17/1899 | See Source »

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