Word: stamped
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...lectures in one of the large Sophomore courses during the last few weeks recall to some of us our preparatory school days, when any childish amusement was more acceptable than serious thoughts and study. Most of us, however, have now passed that stage in our development where we must stamp our feet and explode torpedoes to show our approval of or indifference to what the lecturer says. It is very safe to say that the majority of students in these courses where disturbances occur with systematic regularity do disapprove the method of expression at least. Without the least pretence...
...large, stamped envelope, addressed to the applicant, should accompany each application. A two-cent stamp will pay the postage on two tickets. Tickets will be sent by registered mail, it stamps to the amount of eight cents in addition to the regular postage are put on the addressed envelope; 10. Each applicant should enclose a self-addressed postal card for the acknowledgement of his application; 11. Seats will be assigned by lot, and the management cannot answer communications requesting a change in seats after allotment; 12. Applications will be received for the Harvard-Yale game tickets not later than...
...rules governing applications are as follows: 1. Applications for tickets should be made to the Harvard Athletic Association, Cambridge, Mass.; 2. Requests for application blanks should contain addressed and stamped envelope for return of blank; 3. Graduates and undergraduates of any department of Harvard University may apply for seats. Men who have studied in any department of Harvard University, and have not graduated, may also apply for seats, but must state specifically at what time they were in the University; 4. Graduates of other colleges, who are in the Graduate Department, may apply as undergraduates; 5. Men applying...
...years. Since then he has examined mines in British Columbia and West Australia and has been consulting engineer to several important mines in Colorado. He has been for many years a contributor to the Engineering and Mining Journal, of which he is now editor, and in 1897 published "Stamp Milling of Gold Ores...
...current number of the Advocate contains a large amount than usual or serious verse--the kind of verse which, because it calls for the application of greater powers than the usual poems of lighter verse, more often bears the stamp of maturity and permanence. The verse in the issue, "The River Wall" and "To the Evening Star," avoids the common fault of mistaking obscurity for suggestiveness, and is moreover, exceptional for its musical fluency, delicacy of thought and happiness in choice of rhyme. The editorials are timely and pointed, but beside these, the prose in the issue merits little praise...