He deftly sketches the Knight, who loves chivalry and has fought in many lands for his faith; his son, the Squire, blessed with blond curls and musical talent; the Prioress, who eats perhaps too heartily but nevertheless very daintily; the Monk, who escapes his monastery as often as possible to hunt; the begging Friar, lisper of easy penances to widows who open their pocketbooks wide; the Clerk of Oxford, a sober student of Aristotle; the Miller, a brawny chap with a wart on the end of his nose--and even Chaucer the pilgrim, a shy and rotund little man.
The publication referred to gay students as "campus lispers" and to feminists as "frumps and freaks," and it argued that the school was lowering its standards to admit minority applicants, according to a Princeton alum who submitted testimony during Alito's confirmation hearings.