No undergraduate shall wear his hat in the college yard when any of the governors of the college are there; and no bachelor shall wear his hat when the president is there. 3. Freshmen are to consider all the other classes as their seniors. Harvard College: By an Oxonian - Página 55por George Birkbeck Norman Hill - 1894 - 329 páginasVisualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Frederic Hathaway Chase - 1918 - 352 páginas
..."tarrying out of Town one month without leave." Shaw never transgressed the rule that "No Freshman shall wear his hat in the College Yard, unless it...or snows, provided he be on foot, and have not both hands full," which at about this period, "considering the spirit of the times, and the extreme difficulty... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1841 - 592 páginas
...may be partly inferred from the spirit of a few regulations of the ancient code. " ' 1. No Freshman shall wear his hat in the College yard, unless it rains, hails, or snows, provided he be on toot, and have not both hands full. "'2. No Undergraduate shall wear his hat in the College yard, when... | |
| Henry Harrison Metcalf, John Norris McClintock - 1885 - 438 páginas
...a sober and private manner." " No Freshman shall wear his hat in the College yard, unless it rams, hails, or snows, provided he be on foot and have not both hands full." " Freshemen are to consider all the other classes as their Seniors." " No Freshman shall... | |
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