Word: pay
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...other four, I think it is, of the most desirable rooms in two of the cheapest buildings in the yard. This seems to be hardly fair to the poorer students, who try, year after year, to obtain a cheap yard room. The professors can afford to pay the high prices charged outside, the students cannot...
...reading room, which occurs today, should be well attended by the students who are interested in the success of this institution The advantages of such a room are obvious and are well shown by the number of men who frequent the rooms. It is difficult, however, to pay the current expenses and this method is taken to increase, as far as possible, the receipts. The files are often in themselves very valuable, and should command a good price. We hope the sale will meet with the success which it deserves...
...with some reluctance that we again call the attention of the students to the fact that many subscriptions to the University crew yet reman unpaid. It is no easy task to undertake the management of a crew, and when the difficulties of the manager are augmented by backwardness in paying dues on the part of the subscribers, it is easy enough to imagine the complications which must necessarily arise. Tomorrow the crew leave Cambridge for their quarters at New London. From the faithful training in which they have been engaged during the entire year we have every reason to expect...
...persons who have not yet put down their names on the class-fund book are requested to do so as soon as possible. And all who have not yet paid the first instalment will please pay it to the class committee or class secretary as early as they may find it convenient. I hope that the many members who promised to write a class life after their examinations were over will not forget to do so, and that those lives now written will be dropped through my door or given to me personally. Once more I appeal to every member...
...have an unpromising row on their hands. The programmes for the last junior exhibition were stolen, presumably by the sophomores. Now the faculty have divided the bill for the stolen programmes among the sophomores, and assess every member of the class for his share. The sophomores refuse to pay, and there is talk about expelling them...