Word: ills
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...lies with Columbia and Harvard, and with them alone. The majority opinion of these experts should be final, and will be satisfactory to all parties concerned. If the decision is favorable, the challenge should again be considered; if unfavorable the matter is ended forever, and with no possibility for ill-feeling on the part of anyone. We believe that this is the only honorable course which the class of Ninety can pursue, and we urge them, each man, to consider the matter seriously and not allow unanswerable charges to remain longer against themselves or the college...
Adams, '88, who has been ill for some time, has recovered and is again stroking the 'Varsity Crew...
...leading editorial in to-day's "Advocate" is well written and the several points of which it treats are well taken. We wish to sustain our sister paper in the opinions expressed. It is our belief that much of the ill feeling which is shown between the rival colleges is due more to misrepresentation and misunderstanding than to any other cause. We have tried to keep our columns free from the continual petty wrangling seen in many of our smaller exchanges and which is useful only to the managing-editor for filling space. In this attempt to stop unnecessary debating...
...year, and we notice a more manly spirit. It was toward this feeling of friendly and open intercourse that Mr. Cowles' speech tended the other evening, and those who heard it were more than glad to return the advance in double measure, And so we feel sure that any ill feeling between Harvard and Yale in the past is due in a great measure to the careful nourishing of the seeds of jealousy by outside influences, particularly by that of the daily public press. Careless reporting and "special" work done for the sake of filling "space" is at the bottom...
...fines varying in amount with the enormity of the offence. Smoking was prohibited "unless permitted by the President, with the consent of parents and guardians, and on good reason first given by a physician." Money was very scarce in those days and a frequent delinquent who had the ill-luck to be detected in his wrong-doing would soon find himself impoverished. Indeed ready cash was so difficult to attain that the term bills were often paid in kind, butter, cheese, fruit, etc., being the commodities offered in exchange for education...