Word: term
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...first service of the term was held in Appleton Chapel last evening. It was conducted by the Rev. T. C. Williams, Rev. William Lawrence and Rev. Alexander McKenzie. Rev. E. E. Hale delivered an impressive sermon on the text, "I am the way," after which earnest addresses were ma e by Prof. F. G. Peabody and Rev. Phillips Brooks. Music sung by the chapel choir during the evening added to the interest of the services. The chapel was well filled with students and others...
...part of the Sophomores towards the Freshmen and the honored customs, once so faithfully carried out, are vividly brought before our minds by the epithet even now applied to this first Monday of our year, namely "bloody"-and epithet which is one of our inheritances from our ancestors. The term has lost its ancient meaning and significance. We do not regret that the days of hazing, of pitched battle between the classes, of unseemly rioting are practically at an end; but even now in its degradation, the festival of the opening days of college is celebrated in a way which...
...Library in Gore Hall is open Sundays during term-time from 1 till 5 p.m. for the use of members of the University only...
Messrs. W. G. Russell, S. A. Green, C, F. Adams, C. C. Beaman, Augustus Hemenway have been elected to the board of overseers for a term of five years; R. T. Peabody for a term of four years, and H. W. Torrey for a term of two years...
...12th of September, Princeton virtually became a university, and President Patton entered upon the duties of the office surrendered to him by Dr. McCosh after his term of twenty years. President Patton's address, "The Princeton of the Future," delivered before a large audience in Marquand Chapel, was remarkable for its liberal and progressive spirit. He urged radical changes in the curriculum and a wider range of electives, matters which the faculty will take into consideration this term. It is the new president's ambition to have a thousand names in Princeton's catalogue...