Word: felt
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Great interest is being felt in the sesqincentennial celebration at Princeton this week. The invitation for Yale to participate in the torchlight parade on the evening of October 21 was warmly accepted and steps were at once taken to choose the twenty-four delegates from the undergraduate departments. Meetings were held last Friday evening, at which twelve men from Ninety-seven and twelve from Ninety-seven Sheffield were elected as Yale's representatives...
...unanimously re-elected president and vice-president for the ensuing year. B. H. Hayes was elected class secretary in place of Gerrish Newell, who has left college. It was also voted that the president should appoint a committee to write G. Newell, ex-secretary, a letter expressing the appreciation felt by the class for his past services and the general regret at his absence...
...upper classes in the University and they have won the confidence and esteem of the students. It is with real regret that the University takes leave even for a short while, of such men as Dr. Donald, Dr. McPherson and Dr. Crothers, and their absence will be keenly felt...
After the excess to which the celebration of the victory over Princeton was carried last Wednesday night, it was felt by both officers and students of the University that something should be done to regulate future celebrations. A meeting of the President, several officers and a number of students interested in athletics was held Friday and the best means of celebrating victories was discussed. It was agreed by both the Faculty members and the students that the use of firearms and explosives was unwise. The faculty representatives differed, however, from the students, in wishing that bonfires on Holmes Field...
...chiefly due to the spirit of fair play which has always characterized Princeton. Besides this, however, a number of undergraduates took pains to thank the Harvard men for what they considered the very gentlemanly conduct of the crowd which attended the last Harvard-Princeton game at Cambridge. They felt that they were under an obligation to make what return they could on the first possible occasion...