Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...students, trying to stir them up to a little more enthusiastic support. We cannot urge too strongly upon all the College that we owe a great deal to the Football Team, and that we should not allow it to remain in debt a moment longer. Then, too, in regard to the 'Varsity Crew, as the Echo said, " Less interest was apparently taken in the University Crew and the race with Yale, than was taken in the Class Crews and their Spring Races." This is only too painfully true, and though many say that after Christmas the men will "brace...
...public convenience becomes a public nuisance it should be abated. So long as only students and their friends frequented the gallery of Memorial Hall, those who boarded there were disposed to raise no objection; when the public at large - even the very scum and rabble of society - come to regard it as a place of popular resort, something should at once be done to bar out all such interlopers. The propriety of allowing any visitors during meal-time is questionable; and persons unaccompanied by students should at all hazards be rigidly excluded. The Board of Directors have it in their...
...made at the Spring Meeting of the St. Lawrence University of Canton, N. Y., on May 29 last, were made by a professional, named Fitzgibbons, who it appears is, or at that time was, a member of the University. As there was some doubt expressed at the time in regard to the records, we did not see fit to allow them as the best college records, and these recent developments have shown that our action was right. A rule preventing professionals from competing in college athletic sports has never been deemed necessary, but the action of the college base ball...
...that an annual series of track athletic contests between Yale and Harvard would be of great advantage to the athletic interests of both colleges, hereby expresses its willingness to send two representatives to meet two representatives from Yale, both delegations to have full power to make final arrangements in regard to the same; and would suggest Springfield as a desirable place for the conference, the date to be decided upon hereafter as convenient to the representatives of both colleges...
...that our privileges are being curtailed, our rights infringed upon. Our virtuous indignation so blinds us that we do not wait to investigate the facts involved, but rush headlong into violent upbraidings of those whom we consider the authors of the supposed wrong. The recent complaints with regard to the hours for closing the Gymnasium are a case in point. An interview with Dr. Sargent clears up the whole matter. The real reason for the present regulation is not, as the complainants hastily assumed, to defraud the students for the sake of certain muscularly inclined instructors, but to further...