Word: demanding
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON:- The lack this year of the customary games of football between club tables is most unfortunate, for besides the very invigorating exercise which they afford, they are of the greatest aid in bringing out new material for the 'varsity eleven, whose demand for such is never satisfied...
...ready for occupancy, while work on the chemical laboratory is being rapidly pushed forward to completion. The plans as originally laid out, call for a quadrangle with laboratories and dormitories on every Saturday. The other building will not, however, be raised until the increased needs of the university demand them. Mr. S. Stanley Hall has received the appointment of president. It is popularly supposed that Dr. Warren P. Lombard, a graduate of Harvard in the class of '87 and of the medical school of '81, will be appointed to the professorship of physiology. Dr. Lombard has made this study...
...members of the University are entitled to register as borrowers on the presentation of the bursar's certificate. Three volumes can be taken at a time, and may be kept one month, and renewed, if not in demand. Any person keeping books beyond the prescribed time is subject to a fine of ten cents a day for each volume. Books reserved by officers of instruction, and unbound periodicals, are in open alcoves in the reading-room, and can be taken out, at the close of Library hours, when properly charged at the delivery desk, and must be returned the next...
...elected who were totally unfitted for their places. It may be well to remind the present freshman class that it is the largest one which has ever entered college, and that with the increase in numbers and a new vigor infused in athletics, the college has a right to demand of '92 a record of which it may not feel ashamed...
...members of the University are entitled to register as borrowers on the presentation of the bursar's certificate. There volumes can be taken at a time, and may be kept one month, and renewed, if not in demand. Any person keeping books beyond the prescribed time is subject to a fine of ten cents a day for each volume. Books reserved by officers of instruction, and unbound periodicals, are in open alcoves in the reading-room, and can be taken out, at the close of Library hours, when properly charged at the delivery desk, and must be returned the next...