Word: hides
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...following men presented themselves. Violins; W. Lyman '95; R. B. Merriam '96; S. A. Ettleton '96; G. C. Cook '93; H. P. Walker '95; J. F. Vaughn '95, L. S. S., E. F. Champney '96. Flutes; T. J. Abbott '96. Cello. E. V. Frothingham '96. Piano; A. S. Hide '96; H. B. Forester '95. Candidates for further trial will be notified by postal...
...work to keep the ground in at least decent condition. If it were looked after once a week, it might be considerably improved. One does not expect a base ball diamond like a tennis court, but a fielder would like the ground to be level enough not to hide the ball at any moment after it leaves...
...Library is not the place for loud talking; and nothing more than a word ought to be necessary to make them more careful in their behavious. Their actions have arisen from thoughtlessness more than than anything else. No such pardonable carelessness, however, can be attributed to the men who hide the reference books. These men-and there are not a few of them-are anxious to take some popular reference book out over night. They therefore adopt the plan of coming to the Library earlier in the day, capturing the book they want and hiding it in some safe place...
...whom perhaps some clearer vision of this is coming as you leave these familiar scenes, somehow to speak back and leave your testimony to the true value of college life and cast down some of the false ideas and dissipate some of the clouds which widely hide that value from the eyes of men who are still scattered along the valleys and uplands of four delightful and absorbing years...
...show piece of The Atlantic for June is General Walker's "The Eight-Hour Law Agitation," in which he gives an extremely candid and fair view of the subject on various sides, while nto pretending to hide his own conviction of the impracticability of such legislation. Mr. Warner, in his paper on "The Novel and the Common School," unintentionally emphasizes Mr. Lowell's remark that we are the most common-schooled and least educated people in the world. Mr. Warner asserts that it is the business of schools to teach a love of the good literature which is the fruitage...