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Word: deeping (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...freshmen, drink deep from the cup and learn for the first time what life is. Sophomores and juniors repeat the happiness, you have found before. If you are seniors, que Dieu soit avee vous. Let the bitterness of the thought that this is your last brief season of rest before entering the hard struggle of life but make the time the madder and the merrier. Live while you can for to-morrow...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/13/1887 | See Source »

...Professor Croswell in addition to the loss of Professor Dyer, whose scholarship is no less universally acknowledged. It is not here our place to criticise the course of events that led to this wholly unexpected - might we say unwarranted - loss. To us falls the profitless task of expressing deep regret at losing two teachers who have won the esteem and the thanks of so many of our number. We are convinced that we express the true feelings of every man who has had any intercourse with either Professor Dyer or Professor Croswell when we say that their departure will...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 3/24/1887 | See Source »

...senior class met in Lower Boylston last evening to take action upon the death of Mr. Fessenden. Mr. Coolidge in expressing the deep affliction which the friends of his classmate were under asked that the class take action in the matter, and that some suitable expression of sympathy be made. By vote the president was empowered to appoint a committee of three, who should draw up a series of resolutions expressing the feeling of the class. Mr. Jackson. Mr. Gray and Mr. Brooks were appointed. The matter of wearing gowns at class day in place of the customary dress suits...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Senior Class Meeting. | 3/18/1887 | See Source »

...exhausted; indeed the carelessness with which the question of the possibility of establishing the said club has been allowed to drop, and the rapidity with which curiosity as regards it has evaporated would seem to prove the little interest in it, though there is, I think, deep interest below the surface of all the stumbling-blocks that impede its supporters. The most serious is, as I pointed out in a previous letter, the absence of any special reason strong enough to supply motive power to keep the club going. Though there are half a hundred reasons for desiring the club...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The University Club. | 3/15/1887 | See Source »

...news of the death of Edward Fox Fessenden on last Friday evening, March 11, has cast a sudden and deep gloom upon the whole senior class. Mr. Fessenden had been in poor health for some weeks, and on Sunday was in great suffering. On Tuesday pneumonia manifested itself in its most violent form. Few men will be more regretted not only by his class mates but also by all his many friends in and about college. None who came in contact with his simple, manly character can fail to grieve at his loss. His career at college, both socially...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Edward Fox Fessenden. | 3/14/1887 | See Source »

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