Word: file
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...shall request the captains of these organizations at the end of each year to make a report, giving in detail as fully as possible their experience during the past year and making any suggestion which they can for the benefit of future captains. These reports shall be kept on file by the committee...
...ransacked and set in order; lessons are hastily read, or pushed aside; visions of bright forms and thoughts of conquest flit through the undergraduate mind; upper-classmen are quizzed as to the probabilities of the evening, social, and even gastronomical. At the appointed time, a long train of students file into the president's library, and are warmly received by that gentleman, his wife, various members of the faculty, and a large corps of ladies from the homes of professors and from the families of ancient lineage, of which there are several in Princeton. To the inquiring mind two things...
...should like to call the attention of the library authorities to the placing on file of the latest examination papers. Now is the time to make a collection of the papers in the various courses, before those left over have been mislaid. It is much to be deplored that so little interest should be taken in a matter which is of so much importance to the students. Little or no trouble is experienced in getting a copy of every examination paper and placing it on file in the library. This was done for some time prior to 1883. Since then...
Attention is called to the CRIMSON extra which has been published containing an official illustrated account minutely describing the torchlight demonstration. No student can afford to be without a complete file of the anniversary issues, these editions give a complete official account of the entire anniversary...
...part be more conclusively proved than by the poets own surprise at the melody of his verse. The "Mood of an Autumn Day," by Mr. Berenson, is crude. It seems to prove that the writer's strength lies in prose. The first three lines are harsh, and "need the file." The thought, again, is obscure, and the lines often labor. "The Last of the Adventures," by Mr. Bruce, is not a powerful effort. It is direct, admirably written and picturesque, but it is disconnected. There is lacking something of that "swing" so peculiar to the writer's better work...