Word: listeing
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...Pach's list of university photographs will be issued today or tomorrow. The senior class list includes 206 present members and 51 former members...
...last, after long and impatient waiting, the ever-belated Catalogue has appeared. Few changes are to be seen in this year's issue to distinguish it from other years, save what has previously been explained. An enterprising "Index to Advertisers" adorns the last page, and a useful list of officers of the university, arranged alphabetically, as well as the usual list on the basis of collegiate seniority, appears for the first time. The chief change to be noticed is the new arrangement of full courses and half courses, a change that has already grown familiar, however, and lost the charm...
...Davis, A. M. Lord, Sprague, Brackett, E. P. Warren. These parts are given on the rank of the three past years, orations being assigned to those whose average has been over ninety per cent., dissertations to those over eighty, and disquisitions to those over seventy-five. This list will be revised just before commencement, at which time those who have received highest honors will be given orations, honors will receive dissertations, and under certain conditions honorable mention disquisitions. As many of these write parts as choose, and they are then delivered before a committee, who select five...
...happen to be in the course which claims the privilege of exclusive use of the book are forced to either go without or suffer the inconvenience of long waiting for the restoration of the book to its ordinary place. Some books, it is true, that are on the reserved list, have been duplicated for general use, but not all, as should be the case. The value of the library as a circulating library is perhaps fully as great for the purposes of practical study and general culture as its value as a library of reference...
...Harvard!" Compare this with the comment of the Spectator on Lord Carnarvon's statement that "three-fourths of the literary power of the country and four-fifths of the intellectual ability" were on the Conservative side, and the answer by a writer in the Times giving a long list of eminent liberals. The Spectator says, "Neither assertion nor rejoinder matters a straw. The transfer of power, under our modern system, is not left to professors, but to those whom they scarcely influence at all." - [N. Y. Post...