A Collection of College Words and Customs by Benjamin Homer Hall
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page 24 of 755 (03%)
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difficulty with which many get over it.
The _Asses' Bridge_ in Euclid is not more difficult to be got over, nor the logarithms of Napier so hard to be unravelled, as many of Hoyle's Cases and Propositions.--_The Connoisseur_, No. LX. After Mr. Brown had passed us over the "_Asses' Bridge_," without any serious accident, and conducted us a few steps further into the first book, he dismissed us with many compliments.--_Alma Mater_, Vol. I. p. 126. I don't believe he passed the _Pons Asinorum_ without many a halt and a stumble.--_Ibid._, Vol. I. p. 146. ASSESSOR. In the English universities, an officer specially appointed to assist the Vice-Chancellor in his court.--_Cam. Cal._ AUCTION. At Harvard College, it was until within a few years customary for the members of the Senior Class, previously to leaving college, to bring together in some convenient room all the books, furniture, and movables of any kind which they wished to dispose of, and put them up at public auction. Everything offered was either sold, or, if no bidders could be obtained, given away. AUDIT. In the University of Cambridge, England, a meeting of the Master and Fellows to examine or _audit_ the college accounts. |
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