Word: minds
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...hope to learn that the college authorities will do something similar one of these days; or might they not eventually make up their mind to place transoms over the doors of all the rooms in Sever...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON. - To tell the all absorbing thought in the mind of the Princeton undergraduate at present, suffice it to say that last Saturday afternoon saw their foot-ball teams leave on one train to play in divers places. Three victories were scored: the 'varsity beat University of Pennsylvania, 59 to 9, the sophomores made 15 points to Chester's 0, and the freshmen won from the Lafayette freshmen by 18 to 0. The 'varsity has played four games and in no two of them have the same team played. The second Stevens game was especially disastrous, both...
...finding the period of his loafing so largely extended. He will even tell you that the vacation ought to last until Wednesday morning at nine o'clock. However, it is to be hoped that the proverbial spirit of indifference, which by some calumniators is said to prevade the minds of Harvard men will not become so far triumphant that a large number of its devotees will ask to burden the very parent and nourisher of it, - Harvard herself - by using the grace of the college authorities as a means to create a nice little vacation, to be spent in some...
...occupies, should be willing to expose his narrow-mindedness. It would be useless for us to point out the false views taken by Mr. Peck, for we should be forced to quote nearly every sentence of the article. We fail to see how a man of any breadth of mind who is a believer in human goodness, could, with knowledge of the affairs of our college and experience in the life among us, express such opinions as Mr. Peck has presented. Our best answer is, "Come and see!" For our admiration for the systems which now prevail in our university...
...most happy, is feeble praise. He was eloquent, brilliant, touching: - and as he read, in the sea of intelligent faces around him, the effect of his own unrivalled declamation, his fancy seemed to burst away on freshened pinion, and to pour forth lavishly the riches of his well-fraught mind." President Everett then spoke for nearly an hour, closing with the following toast...