Word: minded
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...outside all the way round." In our own experience we have learnt that the fastest running tracks in England are those with raised corners, and that such men as George, Snook and Cowie all prefer raised corners to level ones. We believe Dr. Sargent has it in mind to raise the corners of the new track in the spring, and we understand the college racing bicyclists are very much in favor of the plan...
...young female students, are very angry because only two young women apply to be let in. The result is attributed much to the want of interest felt by the trustees of Columbia, but the trouble lies deeper. There are but few New York girls of the higher class of mind who desire it. There is not that tendency toward study here which exists in the East and in the West. The young women who would have attended the lectures at Columbia, it is to be feared would have been led there by mixed motives. It would not have been...
...SATURDAY.History and Methods of Classical Study. Prof. Allen, Sever 14, 11 A, M. The second of a series of lectures to be given on Saturdays during the first half-year. They are intended for the guidance of those who have in mind a somewhat extended course of study in Classics. Any students who is taking courses in Greek or Latin is at liberty to attend them...
...learned associates, and his subsequent debut upon the stage as an actor in a play of his own composition This one case certainly was bad enough had it shood by self as an example of the innate depravity even of the most cultivated and most gifted professional mind- as a convincing proof that professors like other men are mortal, a theory which has heretofore met with a very cold reception from the learned world at large. But this case we regret to record does not stand alone. It is but lately that the papers have been filled with the praises...
...remarks in the current Brunonian that hazing in a mild form is still more or less prevalent at Brown University. We suppose the Brunonian will object to our terming the practices "hazing," and in truth the word "roughing" would come nearer to expressing the idea in the mind of a college man. From the article in question, it seems that it has been a custom more or less prevalent among the different classes, for the sophomores to indulge in such practical jokes upon the freshman as to sell them seats in the chapel or hymn books. A favorite trick seems...