Word: deeps
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...death of Francis Hardon Burr is a deep loss not only to those who had the opportunity to be his friends but also to all Harvard men. In him a real leader of men is lost and one who when he lived was an unsurpassed example of that manhood which most nearly approaches the Harvard ideal...
...first Union lecture of the year will be given this evening. The speaker, Dr. Jordan, is in every sense a national character. His unusual subject, better explained, perhaps, by its sub-title, "The Degeneration of the Race Through the Survival of the Unfit," is one which President Jordan's deep knowledge of biology will undoubtedly render vitally interesting...
...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 in his consciousness he both knows it and feels...
...with deep and sincere regret that the CRIMSON records the death of Professor Emeritus William James. His loss will be felt by Harvard, for in him she has lost probably her greatest figure in the world of thought. The undergraduates who knew him will feel the absence of a friend whose sympathetic understanding cannot be replaced...
...score of 6-3, 6-0, 6-3. Niles came through the tournament with the greatest ease, losing but 16 games in six matches. Against Seaver, as against all his other opponents, he played almost faultless tennis and was not in the least pushed to win. His serve, falling deep in first one corner of the court and then the other, and with a high-bouncing twist, proved almost impossible for Seaver to handle, while his net game was brilliantly sharp and severe. From the back-court he played with a remarkable combination of speed and accuracy, making almost...