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...want to attend the conference and have not already registered should leave their names at Phillips Brooks House at once, or give them to some member of the committee. The round trip fare from Boston is $3.65. Registration fee for the full time is $5; for part time, 60 cents per day; board for full time is $8.50; for part time, $1 per day; room in hall for full time, is $3; in tent, $1 to $2.50; part time at proportionate rates. A number of men are going to Northfield for the three remaining days after the New London races...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Latest Northfield Plans | 6/7/1906 | See Source »

...here today by a score of 3 to 2. In the game, which was extremely rough, Harvard was weakened by the loss of Daniels, whose nose was broken. Both sides played a poor game, owing largely to the bad condition of the field. The Harvard attack was weak, showing want of team play...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Columbia Defeated in Lacrosse 3 to 2 | 5/12/1906 | See Source »

Most of the 23 musical numbers, including the incidental music during the farcical football pantomime, have a contagious dash of professional quality. This reaches its climax in the two coon songs, "Toss out a Rose" and "I want a Sporty Man" and in the "Ballet" of the harem...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: H. P. C. UNDERGRADUATE NIGHT | 4/2/1906 | See Source »

...Newcomb emphasized the great need for fixed principles in the science of economics, to which one may appeal for support in economic theories just as one appeals to the facts and formulas of physics in arguing its theorems. In the broadest sense economics is a system through which the want of the people are satisfied. Its operation is not governed by blind force, as some people suppose, but by individual with at every stage. Its purpose is the production and distribution of wealth--the transformation of one form of wealth into another until an object is finally produced...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Prof. Newcomb on Economics at 8 | 3/27/1906 | See Source »

...seats in the cheering section. The introduction of these tickets has enabled the poor as well as the rich student to see all the games played by our varsity team. These games are part of University life; they are played by our fellow students and friends, and we all want to see them. We ought then to have this privilege at the lowest possible cost. In the face of a $20,000 surplus and the fact that the tendency has been to reduce this item of expense to members of the University one looks in vain for some justification...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Protest Against Paying for Yale Game Tickets | 6/7/1905 | See Source »