Word: weste
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...WEATHER.WASHINGTON, D. C., March 14, 1882, 1 A. M. For New England, warmer, partly cloudy weather, north-west to west winds, falling followed by rising barometer...
...WEATHER.WASHINGTON, D. C., March 13, 1882, 1 A. M. For New England, cooler, partly cloudy weather and occasional light rain or snow, south-west to north-west winds and rising barometer...
...sentiments expressed in the extracts from the article on Eastern colleges in the Oberlin Review quoted in our yesterday's issue; and surely every Harvard man will agree with us in this. Such sentiments are both admirable and truly generous, and far too seldom find utterance either East or West. We fear lest our Western friends, who are often too sensitive to the ignorant sneer of the Eastern undergraduate, will misconstrue our meaning. "In this brotherhood of colleges there is no place for jealousy...
...WEATHER.WASHINGTON, D. C., March 10, 1882, 1 A. M. For New England, rain and snow, south-west to north-west winds, falling followed by rising barometer, and rising followed by a slight fall in temperature...
...fine gentlemen, as keen scholars and as earnest Christians. On this side the Alleghanies there are fewer appliances for study, little money and less experience. On the other side there is an abundance of means, and more temptations, greater dangers. But the difference is growing less each year. The West is advancing rapidly, and the 'freshwater' schools are beginning to draw away students from the 'old salts.' The fair-minded student East or West will see that in this brotherhood of colleges there is no place for jealousy, and the Western depreciation of Eastern colleges is as absurd...