Word: cannot
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...close familiarity with the personalities of these neighbors, he understands to what exact extent he can depend on each one; by constant practice with them, by daily experience of them, he has learned how far he can rely on them; he feels their presence, even though he cannot see them; he knows instinctively as he advances that they are by his side or backing him up at a definite spot; he goes into the play with a wholly new confidence; he is really three men in one, for their effort is directly interlocked with his, and deep down...
Perhaps the chief fault of the Council of last year lay in the fact that it was unwieldy almost to the point of immobility. Practically the twenty busiest men in College cannot all be expected to be free at any one time. Consequently meetings were poorly attended; the members lost interest, and efficiency departed. This experience proves that the Student Council was too large to form an effective working body...
This afternoon will afford the last of very few opportunities the Freshman class will have had this season to evince its interest in the score at New Haven on Saturday. Furthermore, every member of the class cannot but appreciate to a certain degree the amount of drudgery necessary to bring the team to the eve of the Yale game with only one defeat. And thirdly, the 1914 Freshman team has a high criterion to emulate: 1912 broke the long line of Freshman football defeats by Yale, 1913 proved equal to this standard, and now it remains...
What we do need, however, and the more of it the better, is the spirit of support which characterized the mass meeting last evening, a spirit which cannot help making the team feel that the whole College is behind it, trying, as it succeeded in doing in 1908, to make the coaches "feel the success vibrations on the "sidelines." This sort of spirit is bound to win at New Haven...
...extraordinary fact that from the nine crews that took part in the bumping races, enough men cannot be brought together to form at least four graded crews, two from each boathouse. Surely the inducement to take part in rowing now is greater than earlier in the fall. The only explanation, which seems to hold water, is that most of the men in the dormitory crews took up rowing as an experiment, have had their fill, and now give it up as uninteresting and unprofitable. That rowing is not intrinsically worth while cannot be the case, for many...