Word: pay
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...handed in their names last term as subscribers to the College read-room are requested to pay the amount of their subscriptions as soon as possible; payments to be made to any of the directors of the room...
...time now spent in travelling by the horse railways. Another consequence of the proposed change would be the necessary reduction of the present exorbitant rates demanded for rooms, and Harvard would cease to be, as it is, notorious for the high prices which its students are compelled to pay for rent. It is true that the present high prices of the Cambridge retail dealers might suffer from the advent of the new road. but this would be more than counterbalanced by the opportunity afforded the students and the citizens of Cambridge of dealing directly with the large stores in Boston...
...from which many redoubtable members of the Nihilist party have emanated-have just been compelled to take up their residence in a large boarding establishment, provided by the authorities, under the superintendence of Princess Shakafskoy, instead of being free, as heretofore, to live where they please. They are to pay ten rubles per month for board and lodging, and be at home before 9 o'clock in the evening, under penalty of exclusion from the medical course. Many of the ladies protested at first against this apparent restriction put upon their liberty, but eventually moved into their new official quarters...
...twenty-seven, among them, four from Harvard, two from Yale, and six or eight from Princeton. As the proposals of Mr. Fraser met with much approval on the part of the English and Irish players, it is expected that the trip will prove a great success, and more than pay for the expenses of travelling. Anucleus of five men were chosen who should themselves select the remaining members of the team. They were, Messrs. Davis of the Union Club, Boston, Cottle of Yale, Balch of New York, Hodge, a graduate of Princeton, and Gerndt, a graduate of New York University...
...supporters. To aid them in their duties we feel sure is the earnest desire of every student of the university. As their labors are at best very oppressive nothing can please them better than the prompt acquiescence in their demands for subscriptions. All those who have already subscribed should pay up, and all those who have not subscribed should seize time while it flies, and before they have recovered from their better feelings put down their names...