Word: think
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Dates: during 1870-1879
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...Elect forty-seven hours, and don't specify what are extra. Then you'll have thirty-seven cuts a week. Five dollars, please. I think we will have a very pleasant day. Good morning...
...subjoin a complete list of the entries for the meeting of the Athletic Association. Some of the events are pretty well filled, others not so well. But we think that, if the day proves favorable, the meeting will be a success. Arrangements have been made, as already stated in our last issue, with the Union Railway Horse-Car Company to run cars through from Harvard Square to Beacon Park. The Brighton cars from Bowdoin Square also pass directly in front of the gates of the Park; access to the grounds is thus rendered very easy...
...imagine, dreaming, yet conscious that I am dreaming, when, after delivering a kick at the door that nearly breaks it in, the noisiest man in the class enters, slams the door, seizes me by the shoulder, and wants me to go to walk. I give a grunt which I think ought to be a sufficient hint that he is not wanted; but, entirely unabashed, he gives me a lecture on the subject of exercise, saying that there is nothing like a fast walk in hot weather to take off a man's extra flesh. As if I had any flesh...
COLLEGE papers are apt to indulge freely in grumbling, and the proceedings of the Faculty usually have to bear rather a large share of it. But now, notwithstanding the aggravations of the weather and the approaching annuals, we find nothing to complain of, and rather think it fitting to make our bow and tend our thanks and appreciation to the members of the Faculty who have issued the list of examinations at so early and convenient a date. We must also notice the opportunity which has been afforded for changes in the Tabular View, which must be appreciated by those...
...think that the Athletic Association is to be congratulated on having run on so far into the year without any intimation of an assessment. Notwithstanding the difficulties in holding the Summer Meeting at Beacon Park, we understand that the entry-book is well filled; and we hope to see a large and fashionable attendance of our fair friends at the Park, where they will find better accommodation than we could have offered them on Jarvis. We trust the result of the meeting may show, in spite of the Transcript, that the youth of Harvard, the flower of the country...