Word: want
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
BOXING.- Do you want to take boxing lessons? If so there is no better man than Wm. S. Gordon, who has been appointed instructor at the Gymnasium. Lessons at Gymnasium or at rooms. Wm. S. Gordon, New England School of Boxing, 127a Tremont street, Boston...
...reached a climax beyond which it is difficult to go, several years since, and that the other colleges, where debating was slow in gaining a foothold, have been gaining ground faster, but this is difficult to believe. At all events, if there is any truth in this conjecture we want to see it contradicted this year, and the first step in this direction is a trial debate which will satisfy us that we are being represented by the best material in the University, and by those who intend to put us on our old footing...
...believe that the interest now manifested in the movement for a University Club should be brought to a focus and an expression of student opinion secured. If the friends of Harvard outside see that the members of the University feel strongly the want of such a central organization the means of supplying the want would not be long withheld. Would it not be well therefore for the president of the Senior class to call a meeting where this question could be discussed and an organized movement in its behalf instituted? Such a step would do more than anything else could...
...first of the series of readings and lectures to be given by the Cantabrigia Club for the benefit of the Radcliffe Scholarship fund was held last night in Sanders Theatre. The audience though large showed an almost ludicrous want of humor, preferring to read sentiment and pathos into Mr. Hawkins's selections, rather than to laugh at the delicate and delightful wit which makes them so charming. Even two selections from the "Dolly Dialogues" did not quicken the audience entirely. This was the more strange considering that Mr. Hawkins read well and that all but one of his selections were...
DEAR SIR:- Nothing can better increase the desire for a University Club than to let the students hold a mass meeting in Sanders Theatre. I for one believe that they want such a club, and that they will want it still more after they will want it still more after they have said so by personally attending a spirited rally...