Word: hoping
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...breathing spell in the steady grind of college work, and enjoy themselves to the utmost. Others look upon it as a special opportunity, reserved by the hand of Providence, for a cloister like course of study, and are only too eager to improve the opportunity. We sincerely hope that both of these classes will find the vacation they anticipate, one, pleasant, the other, useful...
...regard to the class lives of Seniors. By many this is regarded as a useless custom, and few we think look upon it as an unalloyed pleasure. However, it is a duty or a pleasure, in which ever may it is regarded, which everyone ought to perform, and we hope the present Senior Class will be fully alive to the necessity of aiding the Secretary in this important branch of his labors...
...class one year behind that in which his name was enrolled the year previous. Let him the rather look upon the case of the aged undergraduate in a Vermont college, who entered with '32 and is to graduate with '85, and from the example thus set before him draw hope. It is true that some of us, who live at the rate of $1.500 a year, might object to expending such a large sum as $79.500 to attain A. B. as an appendix to our names, but still, chacun a son gout...
...arrange a match between the two colleges, but the Yale club, in response to the propositions made, replied very justly that it was then too late in the season to get a team into anything like form. If a match is to be shot this year, and we hope one will be arranged, it is time to begin negotiations now, since if the matter is deferred longer, either the Yale club or our own men will find themselves unprepared. We are led to suppose that our club is able to put a good team into the field, though it lost...
...occasion slip by. The Historical society, one of the few live societies of the college, has shown commendable activity in making all the arrangements for this lecture. To this society we owe whatever pleasure and instruction we may receive from this evening's entertainment, which we hope will be followed by other lectures throughout the winter of an equally interesting character...