Word: faith
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...clock, and continuing tomorrow and Thursday evenings. Students will preside at the meetings, and informal addresses will be delivered by outside men. Opportunity will be given for voluntary prayer and testimony, and the purpose of these meetings is to strengthen and spread among Harvard men a positive religious faith...
From the very first the CRIMSON opposed any proposition to curtail the number of intercollegiate contests, and our opinion is in no wise altered. We have no faith in the necessity for curtailment or restriction of any kind, not to mention an absolute and unqualified abolishing of intercollegiate contests in all the winter sports. Throughout the year we have taken up in detail the many and varied arguments in favor of intercollegiate sport: its power in holding the undergraduate community together, its good effects upon the participants both morally and physically, its power as an outlet for the energy that...
Just what results are to be expected from this recommendation it is difficult to prophesy. We have great faith in the efficiency of the Athletic Committee and of Mr. Garcelon to deal with the athletic problem to the satisfaction of all. The Committee knows best just what reforms are needed, and just what reductions are possible without injuring the status of the sport. It has done a great deal to eliminate some of the chief objections to intercollegiate sport, and it will undoubtedly do more. In the end its aim is to be a leader in necessary reform; but such...
Professor H. S. Nash '78, of the Episcopal Theological School, will deliver the second of his lectures of the last series of the course of three conferences under the auspices of the St. Paul's Society, on the general topic "The Christian Faith" in the Noble Room of Phillips Brooks House this evening at 7.15 o'clock. The address will be preceded by evening prayer. All members of the University are invited to attend...
...undergraduate community into classes, teams, class dormitories, and the like, and with the whole strengthened by the presence of an untrammeled system of intercollegiate games, that each individual is given a better chance, and the "esprit de corps" of the University greatly increased. Apparently, our elders have little faith in this kind of organization. They would have each man go his way, as separate from the rest as each grain in a pile of sand...