Word: feel
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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There is no question but that each player on the team is stimulated by the feeling that the student body is standing by and is loyal in its support. The team, however, does not require the presence of undergraduates at daily practice to feel this. It would be much better for the men who would watch opon practice to indulge in some form of exercise during the time they would otherwise spend in the Stadium. We believe, however, that the undergraduates should see the University team in action on the Fridays before the Michigan and Princeton games...
...recent communication on accommodations for visiting football teams I did not seem to make my point clear. I feel--and I believe the majority of Harvard men feel the same way--that it is Harvard's plain duty to accommodate visiting teams as well as it does its own. The editorial answer to my letter really amounts to saying that it is not convenient for Harvard to do this plain duty dictated alike by hospitality and good sportsmanship...
...whole, the season has been entirely successful. A victory over Yale should insure the team of the intercollegiate championship. But whether the Yale series be won or lost the members of the 1914 team and Coach Sexton, to whom too much credit cannot be given, should feel great satisfaction on the completion of a season of first class baseball
...significance and distinction. Thoughtful and manifestly sincere, they are the expression of a serious mind which has not yet reached its full maturity. Without sincerity there is no great art, but sincerity alone is not quite the whole story. Mr. Butler-Thwing's poems are marked by delicacy of feeling and a certain just refinement of phrase, but they lack directness of inspiration and first-hand freshness of speech. They are earnest, eager, painstaking and -- traditional. The author has not yet quite released himself from his models,--for a guess, Tennyson in poetry and Pater in the prose...
...Harvard's strategy lies in similar prompt recognition of the obligations which the new era of politics and of education are imposing upon all colleges and universities, whether state supported or privately endowed. The undergraduates feel the call, urge action, and in so doing do credit to the valor and hope of youth. Alumni, resident in Massachusetts, no doubt will look with favor on a more aggressive and formal policy than hitherto has governed the institution. This of course can be done solely on the ground of service to be rendered, and without the slightest expectation that the institution ever...