Word: sentiments
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...criticism. It is perhaps for this reason that, as is the common complaint, so few will enter into competition for the position, or will accept its responsibilities when offered them. Already the HERALD thinks that it remarks a change for the better in this respect in the general college sentiment. For this reason it believes that a frank statement of its position will result for the best. A college paper in the truest sense is distinctly the property of the entire college, and responsibility for its success should rest equally with all the students, the college exercising care in seeing...
...Columbia race. We can afford to withdraw after such a victory, and devote ourselves entirely to Yale, as Yale devotes her energies entirely to defeating Harvard. The disadvantages of the race with Columbia are too many and too well known to require description. We think we voice the sentiment of the college in asking that the race in the future be given up. Columbia is satisfied, we hope, and we are sure that Harvard is. Harvard cannot afford to divide her energies, and Columbia will come to recognize this in time...
Thomas Sargent Perry, recently instructor in English at Harvard, has an article in the July North American Review entitled "Science and Sentiment...
...here at Yale," continues the writer bitterly, "such a committee would be superfluous, and will be for many years to come. The sentiment in the faculty seems, to all appearances, so unanimously in favor of precedent and slow concession that any participation in the management of the college, either active or advisory, by the students, is a thing of the far future. Those secret conclaves of the faculty around which hangs so much mystery, and from which go forth mandates and decrees not to be questioned, are soon apparently to be peculiar to Yale, and will probably be the most...
This from the Leaves shows the sentiment at Lasell: "Our eyes first fall on the Randolph Macon Monthly, which contains a poem on 'How to Kiss;' also, two or three other articles pertaining to the same subject. Somebody must have had osculation on the brain. 'Let the good work proceed, and joy be unconfined...