Word: proofed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...department, which has long been the aim of the Yale corporation. The plans, prepared by J. C. Cady & Co., New York, provide for a brick building 190 feet long, with stone trimmings. It will be four stories high, with an additional fifth in the centre. It will be fire proof throughout, and will have toilet and bath rooms on each floor...
...strong in every college. Something had to be done and those members of the old Union, who really had the reputation of the college and the improvement of college speakers at heart, agreed upon the present plan as the best one possible under the circumstances; as a proof of their good will, they have framed a constitution which provides that no student shall be eligible for the society unless he is previously recommended by a committee of judges, who are not to be members of the society. Their trial of this plan will be made tonight, and as they mean...
...could only be equalled by the New York Cleaning Department. Absolutely no attention is paid to the paved or dirt walks or the entrance to Massachusetts or Harvard, which have been today as so often before, covered with slush and water, against which rubber boots alone are proof. Were these thoroughfares public ones the college authorities would be guilty of violation of city ordinances. Should absence of compulsion keep the powers that be from doing their plain duty towards the students...
...serious subject. No one who stops to think will deny that it is a matter that comes near to us, and one about which we must learn the truth if it be possible. Truth upon the matter must come to us largely by faith. We can give no mathematical proof of the existence of God, but still we are sure of it. We are conscious of it just as we are of our own existence. What we must do is to struggle against the spirit of the age which is inclined to agnosticism. The spirit of the age is constantly...
...lockers and in fact of appropriating to themselves whatever they can safely lay their hands upon. It is useless to waste words in trying to express the disgust and contempt which everyone feels for such specimens of humanity. It is supposed that a man contemptible enough to steal is proof against any sensitiveness at the epithets which might justly be heaped upon him. We sincerely wish he were not, for it would be a pleasure to try to make him realize the inexpressible contemptibleness of his existence...