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When the decision was announced the crowd gave tripple cheers for Harvard and the students went out on the campus to sing the college glees. The more fortunate adjourned to the banquet which took place immediately after. The spacious dining rooms of the Princeton Inn were festooned with colors of the two universities and everything was arranged in a way suggestive of the generous rivalry between the crimson and the orange and black. There were 75 professors, alumni and friends of the two colleges...
Immediately after the debate a dinner will be tendered the Harvard representatives at the new Princeton Inn, at which sixty covers will be laid, and toasts will be responded to by Gen. Porter, Lloyd McKim Garrison, who will respond to the toast "Harvard University": President Patton, on "Princeton University;" Professor William M. Sloane, on "The Debate"; Professor Henry F. Osborn, of Columbia College, on "Intercollegiate Contests." James W. Alexander '60, of New York City, will act as toastmaster, and a quartet from the University Glee Club will furnish music...
...Peabody preached yesterday afternoon at the Vesper Service, taking his text from the story of Christ's birth, "No room in the inn." He said, although where once there was no room for Christ there now stands a beautiful church, and although He is worshipped all through the world, there is still a danger that often men have no room for Christ in their lives. This is apt to be especially true in the student's life. It seems at first that the life of a student or scholar is a very free life and leaves plenty of room...
...Hayes will read tonight in Sever 11 among other selections, Longfellow's Sicilian's Tale, "King Robert of Sicily," in "Tales of a Wayside Inn," the Forum scene from "Julius Caesar," and Browning's "Count Gismond...
...Tale of a Wayside Inn," by J. P. Welsh, is longer than the interest of the tale would seem to justify, but the remaining articles of the number are very satisfactory. Two hitherto unknown names appear as the authors of well written stories,-"A Summer Incident," by R. L. Raymond, and "The Exacting Story," by J. W. R., both comparing not unfavorably with the "Fragment of a Modern Tale," by J. Mack, Jr. "The Last Theme," by F. Johnston, is exaggerated, but its cleverness saves this from being objectionable...