Book/Printed Material Student customs,
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Image 1 of Student customs, u (o V STUDENT CUSTOMS. fi. STAM.KV HALL j-
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 2 of Student customs,
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 3 of Student customs, STUDENT CUSTOMS. BY -J Gl STANLEY HALL. From Tkoceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, at the Annual Meeting, Octobek 24, 1900. ^nmUx, Pais^., W. PRESS OF CHARLES HAMILTON, 311 Main Street. 1901.
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 4 of Student customs, U3 ^s/r Tfipsa-ooai^o
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 5 of Student customs, STUDENT CUSTOMS. The very word leisure with the halo of conceptions about it has a unique charm in this world of toil, moil and drudsjerv. It is the literal meanino; of the...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 6 of Student customs, the entire adolescent period is the history of student life, which has never been considered from this standpoint. Here Ave have groups of picked young men so associated as to develop every...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 7 of Student customs, urtypus or prefer the monophiletic theory, psycho- genetic work in this tield, which may eventualh^ contribute toAvard the bridging- of this chasm, is so far unable to con- struct iso-cultural lines for...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 8 of Student customs, imaginary infant lead to other factors in this kind of fun making. Often, perhaps, with the aid of a dummy, which in some college theatricals is a rather elaborate manikin with various...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 9 of Student customs, dictionary of that tongue, and nowadays Chinese that has no Mongolian elements in it, the unction of the college yells, a list of which furnishes data for a study by itself, to...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 10 of Student customs, 8 a generation of Williams students illustrate the relax ation of disconnecting the normal associative links on which reason and common sense rest and allowing the intellectual elements of our personality to...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 11 of Student customs, 9 extreme fatuity upon the academic mind and also the passion for mod icy which Lotzc so deplored in modern life. The mind ol the modern colleofian deliirhts in few thinsfs more...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 12 of Student customs, 10 ing, and its negations are a healthy pruning that leave it untouched and ever revealed to the psychological seer. It has been urged that collegians develop more power of criticism than...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 13 of Student customs, 11 greater thiin it re;illy is. In Germany the Fuchs, Brander Fiichs, junger Bursch, Bursch, alter Biirsch, heinos.ster Kopf, almost mark great epochs in human evolution. The Bejanus or yellow bill i.s...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 14 of Student customs, 12 gait, toilet, every art of the coquette and even the dllu- meuse from the age of dolls on to the stage of maturest colleofe widowhood are felt and acted out, characterized...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 15 of Student customs, 13 Virginia, who robbed hen and turkey roosts, shaved the manes and tails of horses, etc. clubs sometimes extempo- rized for a season and sometimes lasting for decades devoted to corn roasts,...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 16 of Student customs, 14 and which survives in fagging. The fags of the great English school had to run to an} upper form men and the last comer must do his bidding. Sometimes he is...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 17 of Student customs, 15 survives, with the variant that portions of his body were smeared with molasses. In the colonial colletre he was mulcted and in one large institution still has to supply balls and...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 18 of Student customs, 16 goes a period of probation with certain duties or restric- tions. The ceremonial is generally made up in the Amer- ican college secret societies of two parts one that is elab-...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 19 of Student customs, 17 this consists in the fact not only that Ave leave behind the stress of the lialMe line at the front, whicli our ))est mature energies seek to advance, but we fall...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 20 of Student customs, 18 those born of parents a little past the age of the most efficient procreative vigor the latter of parents who have not quite attained it. This power of free and ready...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 21 of Student customs, 19 Fences are not daily but interfere with the normal rhythm of day and night. There are other rhythms in the male and female organisms which must never be interfered with, and...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 22 of Student customs, 20 educational endeavor. From the dawn of adolescence, when the pugnacious instincts develop, debate becomes one of its favorite forms of expression. The reasoning instincts at this period begin to knit the...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 23 of Student customs, 21 quarrel or to witness a fray. To the doctor s thesis in Germanj to-day are often added special points which the candidate offers to defend against all comers, and imagi- nary...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 24 of Student customs, 22 almost inevitably falls into some imitative rut Carlyleian, Addisonian, romantic sententious, pompously oratorical the omniscient mental gate of the newspaper leader that of the satirical under-cut, funniness, and all the stylistic...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 25 of Student customs, 23 between the different colleger, many of Avhich had their own debating clubs. These unions are often able to bring down leading members of Parliament to defend bills which thc} are advocating...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 26 of Student customs, 24 question, V)ut perhaps the grayest evil is the danger of cultivating too great readiness in speech. This tends to superficiality, loose thinking and rabulistic ratiocination. It is a mental calamity to...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 27 of Student customs, 25 students. The success of all these schemes depends very largely upon the tact and discretion of the president and facult3\ In some institutions students on entering are requested to sign a...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 28 of Student customs, 26 word, deed or manner, to be an heroic ideal and almost an object of worship for his protege. Academic teaching has lapsed far from this ideal partly from the reactions against...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 29 of Student customs, 27 collcfje life abounds in both open and covered hostilities, sometimes with personal assaults upon the members of the faculty, but more often in the form of concerted rebel- lion. College revolts...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 30 of Student customs, 28 asserted the right of appeal from the chancellor. Student life always insists upon privileges which of old were granted in abundance, in the form of immunities from taxation, from arrest save...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 31 of Student customs, 29 they Avere the men involved in a riotous demonstration the night before. Individual instructors are constantly sus- pected of punishing real or imaginary offences by con- sciously or unconsciously increasing the...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 32 of Student customs, 30 taneous and democratic associations of students in the great mediae val universities who came from the same place. They found themselves without political rights in a strange town, with their property...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 33 of Student customs, 31 ally acquired influence in the halls or inns, because his guarantee of financial responsibility was necessary. Later he was able to remove bad principals and forbid objection- able students. In France...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 34 of Student customs, 32 must fight all former colleagues if they wished to enter another society and were sometimes guilty of riots, marauding, and of excesses occasionally almost bestial in their beer duels and other...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 35 of Student customs, 33 The more aristocratic Corps developed as this latter oriranization declined. These are the outojrowth of an extravagant chivalric sense of personal dignity, self-respect and honor, of the passion to enjoy life...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 36 of Student customs, 34 The American Greek letter fraternities are a unique organization, developing to some extent at the expense of the old debating societies, a little as the Corps grew from the Burschenschaften. Sheldon...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 37 of Student customs, 35 them. In small colleges the Greek fraternities have some- times great power over the administration. The move- ments against these societies are spasmodic, and sometimes, if organized, end in the formation...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 38 of Student customs, 36 may some day become the analogues of the colleges of Oxford and Cambridge, which the tutorial methods here might represent. The strength of the spirit of social organizations in student life...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 39 of Student customs, 37 versity .students were training for the priesthood, were ascetics, subdued the bod}^ took little exercise, at most a daily walk with one companion, like the apostles. Seden- tary life is particularly...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901
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Image 40 of Student customs, 38 to the majority of students or an expression of the gentle- manly love of sport seen at Oxford and Cambridge, where it subordinates all efforts to resort to unworthy methods to...
- Contributor: Hall, G. Stanley (Granville Stanley)
- Date: 1901