Word: pardoner
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...have subscribed are expected to take the copies which they have engaged as provision has thus been made. We beg our subscribers to pardon the delay incurred in the delivery of the CRIMSON of yesterday, as the delay was unavoidable, on account of the extremely limited printing facilities in Cambridge. The paper will be duly delivered this morning...
...freshman-sophomoric rejoicings are now happily past. All honor to this true Harvard spirit so manfully expressed one Monday evening which led an admiring by-stander to inquire with interest, "Are those the Harvard students?" We ask pardon if, in our Monday's issue, the unanimous sentiment of the CRIMSON there expressed, was displeasing to anyone, especially to those hospitable freshmen and those quiet and complaisant sophomores and upperclassmen who so thoroughly appreciate the best means of preserving the honor and advancing the real interests of the university, against which the CRIMSON has so treasonably spoken...
...Billier; Mother Ceres, H. M. Clarke, Jr.; leading shepherdesses, L. M. Keasbey, W. Abbott, A. P. Butler. The honors of the performance were very evenly divided between Messrs. de Billier, Honore, and Rand; the former was the most captivating artificial girl we have ever seen; and acted his - beg pardon - her part to perfection. The ladies of the chorus were also attractive, Messrs. Keasbey, Butler, Abbott. Hallowell, and Le Roy especially...
...becomes at all "fresh" in word or deed, an elder member need only beckon to him or call out "Bierjunge," when his glass is refilled and he has to empty it in face of the whole company. This is considered a great humiliation and amounts to asking everybody's pardon for his behavior. If, however, the "Fuchs" thinks that he has been unjustly called upon for a "Bierjunge," he can appeal to the president. If the latter sees fit he orders the challenger to drain his glass. This performance is loaded with tremendous odium and the men are very careful...
...subject for the Conference Committee to take under their consideration, when the numerous weighty questions of college discipline and policy have been discussed and settled, is, if they will pardon the suggestion, the relative merits of naptha and gas as illuminating fluids. We do not favor lighting the yard much more than it is at present, but it seems as though the quality of the light obtained from a number of gas lamps equal to the present number of naptha "dips," would be enough better to make up for the additional expense. Further more, the odors coming from the naptha...