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...Yale foot-ball team sustained a loss of four of its old members. They claim, however, to have just as good men to put on. - [Nassau...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/13/1882 | See Source »

...successful run. Everyone seems to be charmed with its workings. It has now attained to the second stage in its course - the poetical. All its votaries burst forth in song, and even the buskined muse has not disdained to lend her sweetest inspiration to the noble Co-operatif. - [Nassau...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 6/19/1882 | See Source »

...last number of the Nassau Lit. is quite entertaining. We think the writer of "Sensationalism in College Life" has "hit the nail on the head." We wish some of our friends would take the article to heart. "The Honest Italian Laborer" is a cleverly written sketch. We judge from the following that the Faculty has interfered with tennis at Princeton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXCHANGES. | 12/9/1881 | See Source »

...Vassar Miscellany.We dare not attempt, within our limited space, to boast of dealing justly by the three "literary" magazines, - the Cornell Review, the Nassau Lit., and the Yale Lit. We dare not award the palm of superiority to any one, when all are so excellent. But the whole system of such undergraduate "magazining" seems to us radically wrong, and therefore are we no impartial judge. The Review publishes more good poetry; the Yale Lit. excels in literary criticism, Notabilia, and Portfolio; the Nassau inclines both to philosophy and to legendary matter of a ghostly sort, induced, as the Acta would...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXCHANGES. | 4/5/1881 | See Source »

...times crude and hasty. . . Returning eastward, we find the Princetonian, which has improved very much, of late, in the way of contributed articles. Its editorial articles have always been well written. We cannot say so much for the poetry, from which its columns are however, mainly free; but the Nassau Lit. publishes verses execrably and intolerably bad . . . The 'Varsity, of Toronto, is one of our newer papers; and, if it shows no traces of youthful faults, certainly is free from the weaknesses of age. . . Of the Argus (Wesleyan), we say nothing, because, as of the Trinity Tablet, there is nothing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXCHANGES. | 2/11/1881 | See Source »

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