Word: aforesaid
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...they learned a fact which, while being of interest to all, is especially important to those students who are interested in boxing. The fact earned was this: that the room in question was not for the use of the students at large, but only for the pupils of the aforesaid instructors. As these men pay nothing to the college for the use of the room, exactly where they get their exclusive right to it is not known. While we dislike to be continually complaining of the mismanagement which is infallibly shown in some quarters, we think it is time...
...John Harvard and his wife sold what property they had in Southwark. The paper, mentioned above, was John Man's will. In it he speaks of "four houses or Tenements with the appurtenances thereunto belonging, scituate in Bermondsey streete in the parish of St. Olave in Southwarke and County aforesaid which I purchased of one - Harbert...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON :-In the Princeton letter yesterday an allusion was made which would have carried less force had the facts been more plainly and fully stated by the author of the aforesaid letter. The gentleman, having in his mind the Princeton-Pennsylvania score of 31 to 0. says : 'I don't understand how the University of Pennsylvania beat Harvard? Leaving out of the question all flings at the referee, which at best are but cowardly utterances as against a man who cannot defend himself, I think I can account for Princeton's decide victory, though not for Harvard...
...HERALD-CRIMSON, seems a little hasty in his recommendations. Is he a follower of the illustrious reformer, Henry George, or does he really believe that because only a few yet have courts, it would be right to dispossess them. It would be hard at any rate to make the aforesaid holders of courts see the justice of this. When they have the exclusive right to their courts only after four o'clock and even then anyone else can use them in the absence of the owners, they think all has been conceded that the non-holders can justly claim...
...fines for "playing or sleeping at publick worship or prayers," and it was further declared by them that if any "undergraduate comes tardy to prayers (without reasons allowed by ye president or tutor) he shall be fined two-pence. And if he be absent from prayers without reasons as aforesaid, he shall be fined four-pence each time. If a student walked around Cambridge or the yard on the Lord's Day, he was fined not more than three shillings for this act of irreverence, and might be suspended or rusticated according to the enormity of the offence." But this...