Word: sit
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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There will be a Junior class smoker in the Union this evening from 9 until 12 o'clock. The Living Room will be filled with small tables at which the men can sit and talk informally with each other. Large fires will be built at either end of the room. Throughout the evening the 1905 Glee and Banjo Clubs will provide music, and beer will be served in the Dining Hall and Living Room. It will be attempted to make the smoker a pleasant and informal meeting of all members of the Junior class, and it is hoped that...
...most common cause of tonsillitis and other forms of sore throat. There is no "water-proof" shoe made that will keep the foot dry in deep snow, especially in melting snow and slush. As long as a man keeps moving there is little danger from wet feet, but to sit in a lecture room or elsewhere in that condition is taught with danger. M. H. BAILEY...
Class Day is, first of all, our property and although none of us would deny that all the white dresses and colored lanterns and friends and teas and bands are attractive, yet when we sit together in Sanders or cheer the buildings or march together to Chapel, Class Day becomes a matter between ourselves and we do not say much about it to each other and exceedingly little to anybody else. It makes anyone who has been through it a little angry to think that it was all done or ever will be done to amuse those who had tickets...
...second team rank equally and should be given medals; the third, that in the retention of men at trials, consideration should be given, in some degree, to past work, and not, as at present, exclusively to showing in the trials; and that the coach be allowed to sit at trials as advisor to the judges...
...please myself when I take my detur in hand for the ten-thousandth time, with representing to myself a dinner party, where, after his return from America. Hopkins sits with Milton at his right and Cromwell at his left, where Andrew Marvell and Waller and Cowley and Dryden sit with the other guests. Did they make Milton, perhaps, recite some verses which describe the successes of an angelic host; did the poets, perhaps, press their host to compare for them the Connecticut against the Thames, or the Pequods against the wild Irish of their...