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Word: spirits (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...ambition than, in the words of John Stuart Mill, "so to live that Christ would approve of one's life." There is no higher type of manhood, there is no better, more useful, more satisfying way of life, there is no greater joy, than to be at one in spirit and purpose with him and with the great company of loyal and loving souls who gratefully acknowledge his inspiration and guidance and to set before ourselves any meaner ideal is to be faithless to our grandest possibilities

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BACCALAUREATE SERMON | 6/15/1908 | See Source »

...Princeton has been nominated by President Eliot as lecturer at the University of Paris and other universities in France for the coming year. He will lecture at the University of Paris during the first semester and at provincial universities during the second semester on the subject: "The spirit of America, Its Expression in Literature, Education, and Social Effect." These lectures are made possible through the generosity of Mr. J. H. Hyde...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dr. Van Dyke to Lecture in France During Coming Year | 6/10/1908 | See Source »

...fall the Council will start on the first year of what we trust will be an historic career. The founders of the new organization have great hopes for its success, but their real work will lie with next year's members, who by hard work and devotion to the spirit of the enterprise can finally establish its prestige. The CRIMSON believes that the Student Council has almost unlimited possibilities, it properly conduced. It will give definite organization to that vague term hitherto known as undergraduate sentiment; it will be a center of authority through which the Faculty...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LAUNCHING THE NEW COUNCIL | 5/28/1908 | See Source »

...array of courses; the suggestion made, namely, that there be larger provision of advice for the first-year student, deserves careful consideration. Both these articles are well conceived, and the same thing may be said of the other prose contributions. In "Some English Outskirts" the writer has caught the spirit of rural England; it is a pleasing ramble to which he invites us. Part II of. "The Sins of the Fathers" brings out the point of the story: the inheritance of morbid and maniacal impulses; the peculiar feature is that the girl's suicidal mania is developed by her lover...

Author: By Crawford H. Toy., | Title: The June Monthly | 5/27/1908 | See Source »

...that curtailment is not a proper remedy for distraction. It wanted to cut deeper, by dealing with the student activities as a whole, in the creation of a sentiment that can never be legislated into existence. It remains only for the College to accept the plan in the same spirit of co-operation in which it was drawn. We are trying to help the Athletic Committee, the Faculty, and the College. Think over the committee's proposition and come to the mass meting prepared to cast a willing and intelligent vote...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE STUDENT COUNCIL. | 5/26/1908 | See Source »

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