Word: reminder
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...take this opportunity to remind all freshmen who ride bicycles, that the Bicycle Club has very few members from eighty-eight, and earnestly desires more. Now that the time for riding has come, all lovers of the sport who appreciate a lively run through a pleasant country with a crowd of jolly companions, ought to join the club for their own sakes, if not to support the club. The admission fee to the club is only three dollars, and the member has the satisfaction of knowing that he personally is going to derive pleasure from his contribution, and that...
...disappearance of the utensils in question is without doubt due to thoughtlessness and neglect, and it is on this account that we wish to remind all borrowers that they are in fact borrowers, and consequently under the obligations incumbent upon all borrowers...
...events, either he comes from the examination with the cry of "saved !" on his lips, or his name has to be enrolled among the "lost !" Certainly such a rescue, if made, deserves good pay. There are, to be sure, some men who pay their tutors well, but who remind one of the old fellow who exclaimed, "I will die, and nobody shall save...
...would remind the officers of the Tennis Association of the fact that the association has already once been deprived of the use of what is now the best court we have, that back of College House, and that the use of it was finally granted again, only on condition that there should be no further complaint from neighbors. New it was only through the kindness and forethought of Mr. Eveleth, one of the college employees, that such complaint was prevented last Saturday, and if the complaint had been made, we should have lost the use of the court. It seems...
...hope our readers will not misunderstand us. We do not wish to advocate organized agitation and disturbance, on the contrary, we are as glad and proud as anybody, that such things are no longer possible here at Harvard. We simply wish to remind the Powers That Be, of the fact that although their students may have outgrown the old ways of enforcing attention to their needs and grievances, the Powers themselves, have not outgrown the habit of kindly permitting the students to have needs and grievances. Gentlemen of the Faculty, Corporation, and Overseers, remember that now the college papers...