Word: treatment
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...upon Princeton College, Dr. McCosh wrote to the secretary of the committee which had had charge of the arrangements and from whom he had received his invitation. In this letter he wrote that he had attended the celebration on the invitation of Harvard College and had "met treatment that could not possibly by any chance have happened to a Harvard representative at Princeton...
...given a contract to young Hopeful to write in their behalf. Alas, ye wicked generation of upperclassmen. How can you be so unsympathetic and cold of heart to the orphaned and homesick nursling who thus appeals to you for love and aid. For consider that perhaps by gentle treatment after a few short years, you may so improve their tender spirit that he will lose the greenness and lack of commonsense which tempts him to give instruction to men older, wiser, and more manly than himself...
...happy in one respect - that of tone. There are one or two striking lines, and upon the whole this is the strongest work recently published by Mr. Baker. A review of 'Herrick and His Verse," by Mr. F. S. Palmer, is light in handling and therefore well balanced in treatment. It is almost impossible to criticize such a writer as Herrick by the methods which ordinarily obtain in literary criticism. There is one line, "maids who sang his songs so sweetly that Herrick himself wondered at their melody," which evidences good critical acumen, for Mr. Palmer throughout his paper recognizes...
...were the other subjects discussed last year. The former was magnified into a burning disgrace, while in truth, very little foundation for the exaggerated accounts which appeared could be found. As to the latter performance there is but little to be said. The Conference Committee, although deserving no such treatment, obtained the odium of a large body of the students, some because they thought the committee did not do enough in the matter; others because they thought too much interference was shown...
...Yale News in a recent issue talks about the "unnecessary garrulity" of Harvard's coach at the first freshman game, and urges this in partial extenuation of the treatment '89 received at New Haven. We should like to ask our E. C's. unbiassed opinion on garrulous coaching as exhibited by the Yale nine on Saturday. We only had one coach, and Yale had two; but what is "garrulity" in Cambridge, may be thought necessary coaching in a different climate: how is it neighbor...