Search Details

Word: taken (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1870-1879
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

SENIORS are notified that unless more orders are received for certain groups on their lists, those groups will not be taken. Numbers 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 15, 17, 21, 23, 27 are among those for which few or no orders have been received...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BREVITIES. | 2/25/1876 | See Source »

...first time that any college team has tried its skill with other marksmen. In the past four months the shooting has been steadily improving, as we have shown from time to time, and any score made in the last monthly match of the club would have taken the prize in the first match. In their match to-morrow the team that is to represent the club and the College has our best wishes, and we hope erelong to see them engage in many similar contests...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/25/1876 | See Source »

...meeting of the [Oxford] Boat Club was held on the eve of going to press, when the challenges or invitations received by the President from Philadelphia and New York were taken into consideration. Mr. W. B. Close, the President of the Cambridge University Boat Club, telegraphed on Saturday to the New York Herald office that it will be impossible for the University to send a crew to compete at the race in July. The business of the Oxford Club we may be able to report next week...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OUR EXCHANGES. | 2/25/1876 | See Source »

...opinion active measures should be taken at once to prevent such fearful results, and results even more to be feared. "In man there is nothing great but mind"; why then should we let anything take us for a moment from our minds? We come here to cultivate them; why then attend to anything else? It is a waste of time to take three hours a day from this short life of ours and devote them to filling our stomachs with food; to occupy precious moments (when we might be storing our minds instead of our stomachs) with an employment which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SOME STARTLING FACTS. | 2/11/1876 | See Source »

...doomed to utter darkness. Your contemporary assures us that "at Harvard, the man of fashionable illiteracy and European dress has his idolatrous imitators." Shall we not rise at once, then, like one man, and put down these evil influences? I should suggest that the first steps to be taken would be to assemble a congress of "Pocos" in the Yard immediately, divest ourselves then of all foreign habiliments, deliver them over to those whose minds are fitted only for such shackles, and oblige them at once to remove what is given them from the land. Then let us collect...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SOME STARTLING FACTS. | 2/11/1876 | See Source »

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