Word: heartly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...waltzed with a real Harvard student, and Yale and Princeton are ahead. West Point, though, is away up in front. No civilian, no matter how darling his mustache and wavy its silken ends, can compare with the roughly shaved cadet; the bell button, with its imaginative tinkling and figurative heart shape, outweighs...
...compulsory chapel attendance, we print an article from the New York Times upon this subject. We are all familiar with the views held by the college press, but the stand taken by the outside press cannot fail to be noted with interest by all who have this reform at heart. The writer says...
...only the men who "indulge in expensive sprees, and go to bed regularly at 2 P. M." as he somewhat vulgarly puts it, that wish to do away with compulsory prayers. On the contrary, it is the desire of those who have the interests of the college most at heart, that, for the honor of Harvard, the present system be given up. If the only arguments to be adduced in favor of compulsory prayers were such as the pictorial ones the writer gives, he by them would have been abolished two centuries...
...reckless students pay the college $500 a year for it, almost as much as the expense of a coach. Here is a great opportunity for the committee to show, what is doubted by a few ungrateful students, that they really have the best interests of the students at heart. Here is a test...
...should the meeting be held so very soon? There is no hurry, for the foot ball season of next year is far away. Rather is there good cause for delay. Many of the men who have the interests of the game of foot ball most at heart left Cambridge before the notice was posted and will not hear of the committee's action until they return after the meeting is all over. Others who have seen the notice have left since and do not want to return until after Monday, but will feel forced to come back early if this...