Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...dilating the superficial blood-vessels in all parts of the body and of the face. The latter is peculiarly noticeable in confirmed drunkards. The effects of this dilation is perspiration followed, if exposed to cold, by rapid cooling, if to heat, by rapid heating. Alcohol thus makes a man feel warm, but in reality, cools him. There is no stimulating effect on the nerves by alcohol, as is supposed, but the influence is anaesthetic; indeed this is its charm and attraction. All the senses and organs are dulled, and pain vanishes. But the action of the brain also is impaired...
...plan, and it is hoped that we shall be justified in our enterprise by the sale of enough extra copies to pay expenses. As no advertisements will be printed we will be compelled to rely upon a large sale of the paper to meet the outlay. But we feel that all who are personally related to the university will be interested to inform their friends of the events of the day, and will therefore make use of extra numbers of the paper. The numbers will cover an entire official report of the whole anniversary, and will therefore in a sense...
...every respect the Harvard of today is better than was the Harvard of the past. And therefore we feel that its prosperity is merited. We regret only that the proportion of students in attendance from the West is not larger than it is, although of course it is a tribute to the college that the nearer people are to it and the better they know it, the more strongly do they believe in it and trust it. The President the other day called our attention to the fact that in the present freshman class there are only three from Chicago...
Invitations have been extended to the members of the senior class to listen to Dr. Hale and Mr. Winsor in a discussion of the history of the university. Every student now in the university should feel interested to learn the history of his Alma Mater, but members of the graduating class above all others should feel called upon to make it a subject of study. All old institutions possess readable histories, and Harvard is no exception. Upon an occasion like the approaching anniversary it would seem strange to a visitor that not one perhaps in a hundred students could tell...
...little matters that are only of interest to the sincere student of political science become the subject matter of a whole number. We are glad to find that the Harvard journal is not to enter in competition on the same field, but striking out into new paths we feel that its success will be greater in proportion as its popularity is extended to those who are as yet uninitiated into the complicated mysteries of the theoretic political science...