Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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With regard to the game which the nine played with Pennsylvania, we feel that the harsh comment which has been given the team is, in the main deserved...
From the quarter Merrill went to the 220 yards dash, and in two heats reached the finals, running second to Ramsdell of Pennsylvania in both. The final heat was the last event of the day and Merrill did not feel well enough to run. He would doubtless have done so, however, if Harvard's chances had not been already settled. The race went to Ramsdell in 22 seconds, with Pond of Yale second, and Sewell of Columbia third...
...Whereas, We, as their fellow-students at Haverford College, were especially near to them and thus came to appreciate most fully the noble moral and mental traits which both possessed, and now feel all the more keenly the loss which all their friends sustain in the sudden ending of lives so full of promise; therefore...
...stand an excellent chance of winning the second game from Yale; if they indulge in complacency over the work they have already done, they will surely lose and they cannot expect, if defeat comes for this reason, that the University will be anyting else than disgusted. No one would feel worse than the members of the nine themselves if they should lose at Yale, and no one knows better than they that to down Yale on her own grounds will be a very severe task. Hard work must be done...
...letter which Major Higginson has written to Captian Wiggin will do great good. We feel, however, that it may possibly cause a misunderstanding. Major Higginson would not wish it to be inferred that there has been any great or settled change in the attitude of Harvard students towards visiting athletic teams. We are sure that there is today no university or college where visiting teams are treated with more gentlemanliness than at Harvard; to think otherwise would be to judge Harvard harshly without justice...