Word: cleared
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Here Harvard enthusiasts had a chance to shout. Wrightington ran 15 yards round Hinkey. Brewer pushed 10 yards more past Greenway. With a clear field before him he slipped on the hard turf and fell. By several successive rushes aided by off-side play on Yale's part, Harvard got to Yale's 43 yard line...
Once a day, at dinner, soup is served those selected are usually clear soups, free from fats. The meats are usually roasts of beef, mutton, turkey and chicken. There are two or three vegetables chosen by the steward from a list which includes, besides all the plain varieties, cauliflower, carrots, spinach, egg-plant and oyster plant. Simple mean gravies, free from fat, and cream sauces are allowed, where formerly nothing o the kind was permitted. For dessern there are puddings of bread, tapioca, cornstarch, sago, custard, and a decidedly new addition in ice cream. This, however, is allowed only twice...
...religion of my country is a simple, natural religion. Discarding sectarian name, we call it Theism, always keeping clear the distinction between that and Deism. Deism is abstract, logical, negative in its nature; theism embodies the expressions of the devout and the revelations of God. Deism may believe in God, but that God is washed out by the ideas of the man himself. Deism and theism alike must embody themselves in creeds, rites and observances, which have unfortunately been allowed to obscure the grand issues of religion...
President Eliot delivered an address at the first public meeting of the Harvard Religious Union in Holden Chapel last night. The chapel was well filled. President Eliot discussed religious union, saying that a clear idea is needed of what it must aim at, and of what it must be. Many serious mistakes have been made in the matter. A creed as a basis of a union has been tried. Many recognize it to be impossible. A creed is an expression of theological belief, in fixed phrases, but since theological thoughts change from generation to generation, a creed cannot...
...side lines. The enthusiasm runs high and men are apt to follow the teams from one end of the field to the other when long runs are made. It is absolutely essential, then, that the marshals do their work with determination, that the field may be kept clear. It might be well for the men who serve as marshals to take charge also of the cheering...