Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Certain graduate opinion may incline toward the view that the physical development of large numbers of men is of greater importance than the defeat of Harvard and Princeton, but we feel that a series of defeats at their hands would quickly make clear the need of victory for its own sake and for its general stimulus to sport as a whole. --Yale News...
...undertaking this social service work I want you to feel the spirit that animated Roosevelt," said Mayor Andrew J. Peters '95, of Boston, to about 100 undergraduates interested in social service work at Phillips Brooks House last evening. "He would have thrown himself heart and soul into such work as this. . . . All of you who take' advantage of the opportunity to become associated with this work will never regret having undertaken it. It is up to us who have had special advantages of education to repay our debt to society by doing our part, and I know that Harvard...
...clearly visualize the activities of any actual department should one be constituted. It would still have to consider the choice between a system of opportunity and a system of compulsion. At the same time we feel that such an alliance between the academic and the athletic functions would remove the ground for some of the criticisms to which the present system is open. For example it has been suggested that the existing arrangement fosters an undesirable spirit of professionalism, of training a few men to a very high degree that they might go through a successful season. This, as Dean...
...after reading this explanation, the petitioners still feel that they have a grievance, I shall be glad to discuss the matter with such representatives as the petitioners may select. C. N. GREENOUGH...
...there is another reason for the gratification that we feel at his appointment. From the time the French Military Mission arrived at Cambridge in the spring of 1917, until the United States Government took over the control of military training this fall, Captain Morize had a very large part in the preparation of the R. O. T. C. men for service in the war. Many a University man, trained under his experienced direction, now lies among the honored dead on French soil, or survives among the heroic soldiers of America. Consequently, we feel that he has helped the University...