Word: pay
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Athletic Committee cannot stop them. If, in their solicitude for the size of students' purses, the Committee honestly desires to lessen the expenditures of the Boat Club, why not recommend to the corporation that the use of the boat house be granted rent free? At present, the 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...
...Haven boarding-school girls were taken out to see Harvard beaten on Saturday. Wesleyan College has been promised $40,000 by Mr. Griffith, of Albany, who will pay $25,000 of it February...
...college employees, that such complaint was prevented last Saturday, and if the complaint had been made, we should have lost the use of the court. It seems that players have indulged in three-beggars, and broken panes of glass in Lyceum Hall, and have not been honorable enough to pay for them. Certainly it is for the interest of the association, that it keep the use of the court. We therefore urge the treasurer to pay the breakage bill of the man who rents Lyceum Hall from the college, at once, and next spring, some netting must...
...constrained to believe, though with regret, that the average student of the university has become so accustomed to the visits of the summons boy, as to pay but little heed to the invitations of which he is the bearer, other than to note the time at which his presuce at U. 8, is required and make such mendacious preparation as seems best to him for passing the inevitable ordeal. But, on receiving our annual summons yesterday we noticed that it differed from our last summons, received exactly one year ago, in that the seal of the college which...
...stimulated as it is by improved means of communication, involves the grestest danger to the nation-moral as well as political. No less than $40,000,000 to $60,000,000 are annually thus lost to Germany, and, as if this were not bad enough, our railways don't pay, while innumerable hotels become bankrupt, and the enormous sums invested in these enterprises are absolutely lost. The loss in patriotism, character, contentment, and domestic happiness is even greater. The more we enrich our neighbors by our folly, the more we increase their power and lessen...