Word: ever
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...sophomore eleven played two short halves with English High School yesterday afternoon in which neither side scored. The ball was near the centre of the field most of the time and neither goal was ever in danger. E. H. S. had the heavier team and better interference but lost the ball on fumbling after a few good plays. Ninety-eight played loosely and the backs made no long runs, though Gibbs was continually sent around the end for short gains...
...have ever raced, or wanted to, are urged to come out. Entries close with W. R. Brinckerhoff, 13 Matthews Hall, on Friday...
...conference of all the religious societies here, both Catholic and Protestant,- an unparalleled event, as President Eliot remarked in his speech at the time. But the committee stands for something more than a merging of sectarian interests in a common desire for usefulness. It marks more plainly than ever the fact that selfisness as the characteristic sin of the scholar is a thing of the past. The idea of a university as a place where a man could fill himself with learning to his own delectation and whence he could go into the outside world with no sense of responsibility...
...voluntary courses in reading, speaking and debate which are being offered by Mr. Hayes and Mr. Copeland come most appropriately at a time when a more general interest is felt in these subjects throughout the University than ever before. The re-organization of the old Harvard Union, the formation of the Wendell Phillips Club,- now the Harvard Forum, and the institution of freshman debating clubs, all are encouraging signs of this increasing interest. But however beneficial these exclusively student organizations may be, it will be of great advantage to have a number of classes in which men can be specially...
...Student Volunteer Work is one of the natural effects of the influences increasingly in operation, of late years, at Harvard. As study becomes ever freer and more invigorating, and the appeal to purpose more effective, the horizon of the student broadens and his pulses quicken with a desire to be of some account to his fellow men. The turning of the thought of the time more and more to the welfare of the masses is doubtless an influence from without, affecting in this same direction the university and the student The result, thoroughly inevitable and legitimate, is an unaffected humanitarian...