Word: fellowes
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...this city are very indiguant over the action of Referee Camp in ruling out Cowan from the Princeton team in the foot-ball game with the Harvards at Cambridge. Mass., yesterday. Ex-Captain Moffatt, of the Princetons and Hugh Oliphant, a graduate of the college, speak for their fellow graduates, and contend that Cowan is one of the fairest players who ever kicked a ball. He is undoubtedly the strongest man of the team, and his presence and playing always inspire the other players with vim and courage. When he was ordered to step aside and make room for another...
...senior classes of the same college yield the same composite face? By comparing the photograps any one can see at a glance that this is not the case. There is a difference as distinct as the impression which different classes make on the minds of their instructors or fellow students. The class individuality asserts itself, and we can hope to get the general type only when a co-composite of many class composites has been made, and this will then be perhaps somewhat untrue, for I suspect that the type of senior in our American colleges is slowly changing. Would...
...insure good, constant work. And perhaps it is well it is so often urged, since it reminds it that on its present efforts depend its future victories or defeats. But the help gained in this manner is small. What the freshmen need is encouragement and hearty cooperation from their fellow students, not only from freshmen, but from upper classmen; men who have had experience in football, and who are willing to sacrifice a little time and trouble in giving them practical help on the field. It is only in this way that the eleven can be really strengthened and advanced...
...close, the Harvard men were carried from the field on the backs of their fellow students. In front of the gymnasium a crowd collected and cheered for the nine as a whole and for each individual player...
...betters in the semblance of buffalo, or shooting each other with arrows, in the semblance of red men. The precautions taken by each crew, not to allow the other side to see them at their best, may be confidently set down to man's inborn love of outdoing his fellow by sly means as well as by the exercise of power. Every collegian is a Joey Bagstock, who hugs himself if he feels that he is 'devilish...