Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...value. It is, however, all that many men are able to contribute. The significance of the undertaking is wider and more fundamental than the actual material profit that can be expected; it is the public expression of the patriotism and responsibility which one thousand educated men at Harvard University feel for their country. As such the Harvard Battalion deserves the support not only of every man in the University but of every patriotic American. WESTMORE WILLCOX...
...summer baseball, the case of the five Yale players who withdrew from participation in intercollegiate athletics this fall upon discovering that they had violated the Yale rule covering this matter, was considered informally. This subject fell outside the purpose of the meeting and the committee did not, of course, feel competent to pass on the case. There was, however, a very full discussion of the matter in all its bearings. It is expected that following further discussion of the new regulations as provisionally accepted for the university a duplicate ruling will be made with regard to the athletic status...
...Your article on 'Low-Brown' in a recent Bulletin has my attention, and I want to write and say that I agree entirely with the CRIMSON. Since College days I have seen much of the undergraduates both in a financial and social way, and I feel that their conversation is painfully deficient. The range of subjects usually is from athletics to girls, and if one of them should happen to talk on American or English politics the others would be amazed. It seems to me a vast improvement should be make...
...preparedness is felt throughout the country and that college men, a majority of them, favor the movement. The question becomes, Shall our universities, especially Harvard, assist in training men who shall be fit to lead in case of war? The Alumni Bulletin, although vague in its expression, seems to feel that the University should confine itself to breeding "in their students those highest qualities of citizenship which lead quickly to the making of good soldiers, rather than to undertake actual military instruction...
Harvard's future opponents, Princeton, Brown, and Yale, with the possible exception of Yale, do not face any very serious opposition this afternoon. Princeton will meet the Williams College eleven at Princeton. The Tigers feel confident that their smooth-working offense will overwhelm Williams, especially since the latter are minus their captain and four other regulars, who are on the hospital list. Princeton has been developing the forward passing game, and there is confidence that, with the proper strategic moves, the passes will prove successful in the big games to come as well as against Williams today...