Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...standard. He is practically cut off from association with American students, and consequently from any advantageous opportunity to change his reading knowledge of English into the necessary speaking and hearing knowledge. Thus the chief obstacle between the interesting in body of foreign students and the American students, who really feel very friendly toward them, is simply this ignorance of spoken English on the part of foreigners and this lack of continuous helpful association between...
...stimulating communication which appeared in yesterday's paper by Mr. Keizo Matsuno on "The Japanese Student at Harvard" deserves our further attention. Can it be that any thoughtful person who read the article, with its declaration of friendship, failed to feel the deep significance it contained when viewed from the standpoint of international relations...
...winsomeness of his letters, unless to add to it. It is lost to view, often, in the sincerity and pathos of his lyrics, but it is felt in most of his longer efforts in prose, and accounts for a certain dissatisfaction which many grateful and loyal readers nevertheless feel in his criticism. Lowell was more richly endowed by nature and by breadth of reading than Matthew Arnold, for instance, but in the actual performance of the critical function he was surpassed in method by Arnold and perhaps in inerrant perception, in a limited field...
...this work in Cambridge and Boston is proportional to her immense resources. Phillips Brooks House is fully acquainted with these needs. It only lacks the men to meet them. Aside from the time given for preparation, such work rarely requires more than one evening a week. While many men feel that their time is too full to crowd into it another activity, the manner in which they meet this appeal from the less fortunate is a fair indication of their future usefulness. Men who have done this work assert to the fact that the value of the experience repays their...
...yesterday, the Executive Committee of the I. C. A. A. A. A. at its recent meeting in New York discussed informally an intercollegiate alliance between Cornell, Pennsylvania, Dartmouth, Syracuse, and possibly Columbia, based upon the Yale, Princeton, Harvard rapprochement. The Times article further suggests that the smaller colleges feel the need of such a union to maintain a balance of power against the Big Three, whose mutual reconstruction policy, they believe to contain the element of exclusiveness toward other universities...