Word: roughs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...scrimmage through simple laziness, which it would be a kind of flattery to call indifference. It is plain that it is somewhat irksome and involves a little trouble to put on a football suit, and that it seems inconsistent with the dignity and importance of a Senior to rough it a bit at the Tree. But the custom is nevertheless a good one and as old as Class Day itself, and the most important of the events of this day. It will not hurt any one to enter this friendly contest, and it should mean a good deal...
...Pennsylvania. It rained hard from daybreak to dusk. All of the oarsmen kept close to quarters all day, reading and sleeping. The Pennsylvanians had planned a trip up the river on their launch to make friendly calls on their neighbors of Harvard and Columbia, but the water was so rough that the proposed visitations were abandoned...
...MONTH'S cruise on a sailing vessel. It is desired to make up a party of ten or fifteen college men, the trip to begin July 1. It will extend along the Eastern coast as far as Nova Scotia, then off shore to the Bermudas. A good chance to rough it. For particulars address E. W. Perry, New Bedford, Mass...
...MONTH'S cruise on a sailing vessel. It is desired to make up a party of ten or fifteen college men, the trip to begin July 1. It will extend along the Eastern coast as far as Nova Scotia, then of shore to the Bermudas. A good chance to rough it. For particulars address E. W. Perry, New Bedford, Mass...
...volume of stories from the Harvard Advocate is now on sale at all the bookstores in Cambridge. It is handsomely bound in crimson cloth, rough edges, and is published by Wm. B. Wolffe. This is a collection of forty-eight stories selected from the Advocate from its founding, 1866 to the present day. These stories have been carefully chosen by old editors, Professor G. L. Kittredge, Mr. C. T. Copeland and Mr. C. H. Grandgent. The first few stories are from the earliest writers, E. W. Fox '67, N. G. Peckham '67, and C. S. Gage '67, the founders...