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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...against the University of North Carolina on April 21 the schedule for the southern tour this year ended. The game resulted in a victory for Princeton by the score of 9 to 2. In this contest the all round work of the team was the best that has been seen this season. Considering the tour as a whole, the chief features were the unusually fine pitching of Jayne and the excellent work of Bradley and Butler. Since the team's return on Thursday last, there have been light practices, with a game on Saturday against the Pennsylvania State College which...
...partly as an example to the rest of the team, and partly as a reminder to him, it is highly desirable that such a breach of discipline should receive some attention. Accordingly, although the man in question is one of the best athletes on the team, the management has seen fit to bar him from competition in the dual games to be held next week with the University of Pennsylvania...
...walls of the main upper gallery of the Fogg Museum may now be seen a large collection of photographs from works by the German, Flemish and Dutch masters: Durer, Holbein, Rubens, Van Dyck and Rembrandt. They are, for the most part, portraits-including those of historical personages such as Henry VIII, Anne of Cleves, Charles I and Henrietta his Queen, William of Nassau, Edward VI, Philipe IV of Spain, Marie de Medicis, Descartes, Erasmus, Bishop Warham, and portraits by their own hands respectively of Duren, Rubens, Van Dyck, and Rembrandt...
...perfect and all that is opposed to nature imperfect. Now his was the time of the suppression of nature; the whole teaching of religion was that of original sin and natural perversity and in denying this Moliere even condemned religion itself. This extreme and unyielding adherence to nature is seen in all his work...
...number of the Advocate which comes out today is hardly up to the standard. The best thing in it is a "Change of Costume," by R. F. Maynard, and although the plot has seen better days; it is worked up very simply and naturally to the only possible conclusion. A sonnet, "Spiritus Victus Amore," is the kind of a poem one of which is almost sure to turn up in every number; it reads along smoothly enough and does not mean anything in particular. G. H. Scull contributes a rather vivid sketch of life on the Banks suggested perhaps...