Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...number of interesting articles covering a wide range of subjects. The graduate paper is "The Student's Business, a Homily," contributed by Professor L. B. R. Briggs. Critical articles on Harvard life and its influences have been so numerous of recent months that Harvard men are beginning to feel like specimens in an educational museum. If all the criticisms were as good humored as Professor Briggs' we could not complain. He has been most intimately associated with Harvard undergraduates for many years and surely knows whereof he speaks. His comments on the abstracting influence of outside work may seem...
...practice games which are provided for the eleven is directly proportional to the amount of available money, it will be seen that the final success or failure of the team depends upon the degree of financial support which the class furnishes. Ninety-two is a large class, and we feel sure that it will respond generously to the appeals for financial aid for its football team...
...Memorial and at Leavitt and Peirce's during today. They will be removed tonight, so everyone ought to vote will out delay. It will take only a few minutes for each man to write out his ballot and drop it in the box, and every man ought to feel it his duty to do so. Unless all the men in college cast their votes, the value of the election will be impaired, and the true feeling of the college will not be ascertained...
...CRIMSON congratulates its illustrious contemporary, with whom in the past it has had many a "shindy" (but let by-gones be by-gones), on its attractive and winning appearance. The college should feel proud to support such a worthy object as the "only successful illustrated college paper," and from the appearance of the first number there is every reason to believe that the present year will be more successful than ever...
...time after attention was called to the box, contributions of papers were numerous, but toward the end of the year men grew careless and there was a noticable falling off in the number of papers found in the box. The object is a worthy one and we feel certain that it is only necessary that the attention of the men be called to it again to make the contributions to the hospital as numberous as ever. Few men read their papers after they leave the tables, and either carelessly stuff them into their pockets or throw them away. If they...