Word: expression
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...educated post-graduates of other colleges. With forty-one professors and an income of $225,000 we should be educating a thousand young men instead of two hundred.' Precisely the same complaint might be made of one or two other important institutions richly endowed by large bequests for the express purpose of educating young men of limited means. The course of study necessary to obtain a diploma in some of these is so difficult as to be simply impossible to a boy of ordinary intellect; hence, out of freshman classes of seventy, four or five boys worry through, often with...
...results will be below the standard. Although we may keep the championship cup this year without the services of a competent trainer, we can hardly expect to do so hereafter. The lack of good training is felt as much in this as in other branches of athletics. We again express our hope that the faculty will next year see fit to allow some different arrangement in regard to trainers than that of this year...
...express train from Boston on the B. & A. R. R. will get to New Haven in time for the game tomorrow. Return from New Haven at 6.28 P. M. arriving in Boston...
...should be stated for the benefit of the HERALD'S correspondent, '86, that the 1 P. M. train for Providence today is the New York express and cannot be delayed half an hour. Members of '86 and others can witness most of the game by taking the 2 P. M. train. One dollar round trip tickets can be bought at Bartlet's until eleven o'clock and after that of the manager on the train. All who can buy tickets before eleven are requested to do so, that the number of special cars needed may be known early. Trains returning...
...final, and perhaps the most effective, argument against the fence in the opinion of the faculty is the belief shared by its leading members, that the students themselves are really opposed to the project, although many of them do not see fit to express their sentiments on the question. Many of these reasons appear to have some foundation in the nature of the case; but it does not seem to us that, taking all the facts into consideration, they are strong enough, whether taken separately or together, to justify the abandonment of the plan as first proposed of building...