Word: feeling
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...plan is to be instituted, the division of the house into two parts, those on one side who feel that the administration has been a success, and those on the other who think that it has not. The discussion will thus take the form of a debate. Some prominent man, not yet decided upon, will be secured to bring the discussion to a close...
...five o'clock athletic class in the Hemenway Gymnasium has begun the season with an attendance greater than ever before. In fact, the entire available floor space is being utilized. This great popularity of the class shows how many men feel that this is the most beneficial form of exercise during the winter months. Regular exercise under the guidance of an instructor is one of the greatest helps to mental efficiency. For this reason, the five o'clock class is one of the most important parts of the University's system of athletics and physical training...
...prevented. It remains the peculiar duty of a university and of educated men to study and remove the conditions which lead to war. We have only praise for the knitting of socks and mufflers; it were more than a pity if we, having done little more, were to feel we had done enough...
...editors, is held responsible, and is judged and criticized for any intemperate utterance. If the editors were publishing the "Monthly" purely as a personal venture, and if the "Monthly" did not purport to be a magazine, representative of the literary ability and taste of the University, the editors might feel at liberty to publish anything within the postal regulations. But the "Monthly" calls itself the "Harvard Monthly," and is circulated as a Harvard undergraduate magazine. Its responsibility to the University is clear, and the editors, whose action shows that they realize this responsibility, are to be commended, even...
...proportionate to the attendance. That a large attendance is desired, is shown by the fact that every week a notice is sent to each Freshman. I believe that the length of the walk to Phillips Brooks House keeps many Freshmen from attending Dr. Fitch's talks. Many busy students feel that they can afford to spend thirty-five minutes at the meetings, but not the twenty minutes needed to walk to and from the meeting place. To spend this twenty minutes seems to me entirely unnecessary. In each of the new dormitories there is a common room, at once conveniently...