Word: saves
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...meeting at Edinburgh University. Now they have services and meetings, especially in the hospitals, where the medical students often go and hold short services with the patients. This was a great step, but more was required. Many of the students were going down hill, and efforts were made to save them. There was formed a Medical Students Christian Association. A great cricketer named Studd, and a stroke of the Cambridge crew named Smith wished to go to China as missionaries. An opportunity was given them to speak to the students at Edinburgh. They were most enthusiastically received and their word...
...this is added the obvious advantage, which members alone have of securing discounts on cash purchases at leading retail stores in Boston. The experience of the past five years makes it safe to say that the member is very exceptional who cannot save several times his membership fee in transactions with these affiliated retail dealers...
There has been no game with any great interest at stake save the lost game with Harvard. Looked at from our standpoint, that game was a bad failure; but the team has not forgotten how to play ball. The game with Columbia showed that it was the most amusing game ever seen here. Columbia played with several substitutes, and found it necessary to use all the rest brought along, and then put the manager in citizens dress on third. McCusker played the best game for them, and seemed really the back-bone of the team. De Sibourg, who pitched...
...Easter hymn was sung by the Ladies' chorus and a poem read by the Rev. S. L. Taylor, '61. It was much curtailed in order to save time...
...classes are now all hard at work in the middle of the long term, which has no break till July, save a few days at Easter. The advantages offered to the students in the way of lectures are exceedingly attractive, and are being enjoyed to a greater or less extent by all. The courses are: Mechanics, in Sheffield Hall, a series of fourteen lectures upon subjects of a popular nature; a course under the auspices of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, given on Wednesday evenings from time to time throughout the year; the Dwight Hall lectures on Monday evenings...