Word: boundingly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...edition of the catalogue of the York Gate library (London, Eng.), of books relating to geography, commerce and colonization. It is a quarto volume of 936 pages, printed on handmade paper with large margins, and illustrated with facsimiles of the title pages of rare volumes. The book is handsomely bound in full parchment...
...will of Charles Dudley March, '80, who died very suddenly in Paris a few years ago, the college has received recently a library of about one thousand volumes, together with a lot of pictures. The books are all excellent editions of standard authors, and are bound well. Mr. March was a student of the Romanic languages, so that French, Spanish and Italian literature are well represented...
...race between Yale and Cornell. We sincerely believe that we have the fastest university eight in America, and we are desirous of meeting a worthy foe and settling the question. We believe that the races Yale has won put her in such a position that she is in honor bound to receive a challenge from a crew with Cornell's record...
...matter should be attended to at once. Either cups should not be promised or they should be given. It hurts athletics in general, it hurts each delinquent organization in particular to have victorious teams go unrewarded. If men do not receive the trophies promised them they are bound to be dissatisfied and to refuse their hearty cooperation in athletics in the future. It will be a move in self-defence, therefore, for the associations to fulfil their obligations...
...vote of the Athletic Committee which we print this morning is obviously a measure of vital importance to Harvard athletics and as such is bound to be subjected to a deal of conflicting criticism. Before discussing, however, the probable effect of the committee's vote or the immediate bearing which the present condition of our athletics may have had upon their action, we wish for a moment to call the attention of our readers to the historical aspect of the question, believing that a large minority of Harvard men are, to say the least, very imperfectly informed in regard...