Word: referring
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...number of men in college who do not belong to the Co-operative Society, yet who do not scruple to purchase goods at the store in Dane Hall, and even go further and obtain the regular reduction from the affiliated tradesmen. In justice to these men to whom we refer, it must be said that there is no deliberate intention of circumventing the Co-op. In all the cases that have come to our notice, the men belonged to the society last year, but have not renewed their subscriptions. The year is now so far advanced that these...
...interesting change in the new faculty regulations is one which, though it received comment in our review, deserves more than passing notice. We refer to the abolition of the old and time honored warning and the substitution of the slower, but far more dreadful, admonition. No longer can a student depend for mural decoration upon the attractive cards issued by the faculty. No "prayer" or other warning shall steal upon a man and cast a temporary gloom over his existence. But, after we have been lulled into indifference of the faculty dynamite stored beneath us, suddenly the explosion comes...
...college. Let something be done quickly to put an end to this crying evil. Let every man ascertain the names of those who thus misuse their power, and let them lienceforth be avoided as "dangerous beasts" by all who love the college. I would not seem to refer in anything I have said to those college correspondents who give their papers all the news, without attempting to make a disgraceful sensation of a cold, dry fact. On the contrary let men of this sort, and there are still a few in existence, receive all possible praise...
...Petitions relating to absence from college exercises must be presented within one week after the absence to which they refer. Such petitions must contain the student's explicit statement that the absence in question was unavoidable for a reason clearly and fully set forth...
...student's reach. With the advent of warm weather we may expect to hear a few smothered imprecations over matters which, though to the freshman eye enormous evils, have become perfectly adapted to the Harvard condition of calm, admiring and independent indifference. It is needless to say that we refer, not to the pump, it is true, nor to that summer boarder, the mucker, who like the poor, is always with us, but to the "state of the yard." Coolness and audacity are necessary to approach this subject, but necessity is even more powerful than imprudence. One of the notably...