Word: fellowes
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...them. North America gives another showing, with only one fourth the population of Africa, i.e. 76,033,000, she rejoices in 1,136 dailies, with a total circulation of 4,578,223 per issue. Calculate that out for yourselves, if you are patriotic enough. The editorial fellow feeling forbears a fling at Harvard indifference of "other publications." North America has 9,556 with a total circulation per issue of 22,073,000 as against 10,730 with total circulation of 33,901,400 per issue in Europe...
...class as that of '75, and reasoning by analogy, he has arrived at the conclusion that his own will be the class of '00. "And, papa," he says, "of course nobody would want to belong to the class of nothing at all. Everybody would make fun of a fellow, and he never will feel as if he amounted to anything. If I can't enter college when I'm seventeen, I'd rather wait over a year and go in the class of '97, for then at least I'll be in the class of '01." The father laughs...
...very events which indirectly led to the complication of a court trial, and the student whose testimony figured somewhat in the late trial was exempt from criticism by those who are usually disposed to shield wrong doing at all hazards, only because of his uniformly courteous bearing towards his fellow students, the high respect which his general course in college has gained for him, and because his testimony was not volunteered, but was given in the course of ordinary conversation at the table of one of the professors, to whom he is related and with whom he resides...
...centennial celebration which has just been celebrated at Columbia recalls to us the festivities of last fall when we were engaged in a similar undertaking, and creates in us a feeling of fellow-interest and cordiality. Columbia's situation in the heart of the city of New York gives her an opportunity to attract to herself many eminent men, and for this she is to be envied. This is an advantage which Harvard does not possess, and probably never will attain, for the course of the progress of the United States is, like that of all other countries, westward...
Captain Ward also writes that there should be more individual training. A thin man needs different work to make him come to the same mark with a stout man. A nervous fellow must be treated differently than the others. Yet the members of our crews, and base and foot-ball teams are all trained alike. When a man gets over-trained they do not let him rest a day and then go on. If one finds his lungs a little weaker than the others, and that he cannot run from a warm gymnasium into the cold, frosty air without injuring...