Word: understanded
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...materials for spreads must be carried in by attendants on foot; third, that between 4 p. m. and 11 p. m. attendants will not be allowed to enter or leave the yard with dishes, ice cream cans, etc. Seniors must see that their caterers understand these rules...
...change had been given beforehand. The students were disappointed, however, and many were obliged to sit on the grass during the entire game. Why we should be forced to pay one dollar for the privilege of seeing a game on our own grounds it is hard to understand. The association might just as well charge one dollar admission and leave all the seats unreserved. We would strongly recommend a return to the old system of having three or four sections unreserved. By doing this, the base-ball management will escape the maledictions of the students and will still have enough...
...cents. The base-ball club has never been a needy organization; in fact, it has always had more money than it could convenrently spend, and this too when reserved seats were thought to be worth only twenty-five cents. With this fact in view it is rather hard to understand the action of the present manager. Games to-day are no better than they were last year or the year before, and need of money is certainly the only excuse that would justify the management in raising the price of seats. Need of money, however, is not likely...
...Home Rule, the Bulgarian Question, the relation of the Great Powers to each other, etc. The newspapers will be used from time to time in connection with the other text books. The course is French 11, a course in French conversation, therefore only those who are able to understand French will profit by this opportunity. It is to be hoped, however, that some of the lectures will be repeated in English for the benefit of the rest of the college, as was done in the case of the lecture given last winter upon General Boulanger...
...thoroughly understood the games. It is hard to prove a negative, but, so far at least, I have found no evidence of any such thing. I feel convinced that the committee, in its ardor, have accepted some false rumor for a fact. At all events they admit, I understand, that no such thing has recently occurred, and even supposing it may have taken place in the past, its own voluntary cure without a suspension of the games leaves the majority of your committee in the attitude of the investigator into the Tewksbury almshouse, who found all the ills had been...