Word: regretful
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Young men, you can make of yourselves what you will; but a thing once done, is done forever. Live, then, that you may have nothing to look back upon, when you are as old as I am, with regret. Your memories will not fail you; and if you err now, you will have never to be forgotten stains on your lives. You are all authors; each of you at the end of each day has written a page; but what you write can never be erased. Write you books clean, then; live that your memories...
...first annual dinner of the Shooting Club was held at Young's last evening. Mr. J. A. Frye, '86, presided, and acted as toast-master. Messrs. H. M. Williams, '85, and L. M. Garrison, '88, were present as guests of the club. A letter of regret was read from Mr. Wm. M. Derby, president of the Yale Gun Club, who was unable to present. After the menu had been discussed, the following gentlemen responded to toasts: R. L. McCook, '85; H. M. Williams, '85; F, S. Meade '87; W. H. Slocum, '86; L. M. Garrison, '88, and others...
...columns we print this morning,- and with deep regret,- the ultimatum of the President and Fellows of the University in regard to the petition for voluntary prayer. Signed by an overwhelming majority of the undergraduates, endorsed by many of the prominent alumni of the college, and strongly approved by the leading journals of the country, we felt justly confident that this petition would produce the desired effect. But the authorities by whom Harvard is governed are not troubled by that vice of small minds-consistency. While making the most sweeping changes in their frantic haste to reach the state...
...with regret that we are compelled to take notice of the tardiness in returning the marks in some courses It has occasioned great discontent among the students who are in the courses complianed...
...looking over the list of lectures to be given this year to students of the university, we regret to see that no arrangements have been made by the powers that be for lectures in Political Economy, except for those on Free Trade and Protection. Now, last year, students taking Political Economy, and especially members of the elementary course, Political Economy 1, derived great pleasure and profit from the lectures given under the auspices of the Finance Club. The lecture by Mr. Edward Atkinson on the subject, "What makes the Rate of Wages," and that by Mr. Gamaliel Bradford, on "Political...