Word: regretful
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...govern the meeting." The entries include many names of note in bicycling circles, both among college men and amateurs generally, those best known among the visitors being Hendee, Frazier, Hamilton of Yale, who won at New York on Saturday; Maxwell, also of Yale, Haven, Segur, Sabin and Bigelow. We regret to see that the names of Claflin and Dean are not among the contestants...
...always been a subject of regret, however, that better opportunities could not be offered to students who desired to pursue some special branch here at Harvard, but for pecuniary reasons were unable to do so. With the exception of the scholarships, which are confined almost exclusively to undergraduates, very little pecuniary aid can be offered by the college itself to students who desire to attend some special courses without becoming members of the college proper. The founding of these Morgan fellowships has in a great measure removed this difficulty, as by the regulations which attend their disposal they...
...society which has quietly followed year after year the set forms and regulations which have been handed down from our forefathers. Among other customs, the society has hitherto had rooms where the members have met and debated on the important subjects which have come up for consideration. Now, we regret to learn, this old custom has been given up. The new shingles which have just been printed bear the following remarkable legend : "The members are requested to meet in their rooms this evening." What a strange sight it will be when the society holds its first meeting under...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON-We regret to notice in the new Elective Pamphlet for 1884-85 that the faculty have not yet seen fit to do away with the paying of extra fees where Chemistry and Natural History courses are elected. The majority of men while in college elect twelve full courses, and the instruction in these costs them $450. A student intending to make Chemistry a profession would naturally elect besides six miscellaneous courses, courses 1 to 6 in Chemistry. Chemistry 1 and 2 have extra fees of $10 each, the other four courses, of $15 each. Thus...
...names of the graduates into a language which is not Latin and which can not be rendered into Latin. It seems but just that we should have modern names for modern things, and especially for modern persons. Latin undoubtedly has its place in every college education, and we should regret to see anything infringe upon synch a language, but we do not think a list of names, some of which are pure Anglo-Saxon, affords a favorable opportunity for observing the beauties of the Latin language...