Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Abolishing the Yale football rally is abolishing a tradition. One might feel little guilty about that, did he not know that the tradition has been soured by unspontaneity. The game is where it has always been, on the knees of the gods and the linemen. And at the needful moment, in the Yale Bowl, it will be for the cheering section to show that Harvard's old and inextinguishable pride in the Harvard team has lost nothing more than a blurring anachronism...
...coaches feel that the place where cheering does the most good is the Bowl during the game, and that the players would benefit greatly from a long nights sleep before leaving for New Haven...
...President Coolidge had written to British Ambassador Houghton: "I need not tell you how much I shall feel the loss of your services" (TIME, Nov. 12). But that it seemed did not mean that the President accepted the Ambassador's resignation. He was merely acknowledging its receipt. Last week, having failed of election to the Senate from New York and conferred with the President at the White House, Ambassador Houghton announced that he was returning to the Court of St. James...
...Well, I may see you in Georgia. I can't tell where I'll be. . I'm just going around in the car, wherever I feel like...
...last of his hour examinations, the last major game at Cambridge, and the happily diminuendo echoes of the campaign make the Vagabond feel that one stage of the college year is past. In support of this impression is the fact that the last of Professor Hazard's public lectures occurs this after noon. He speaks in Emerson Hall at 5 o'clock on "Paul Claudel et Paul Valery...