Word: feelings
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...book has been placed at Leavitt & Peirce's for the signatures of those men who will accompany the nine to New Haven on the nineteenth. Every man in the university who can by any possibility make the trip, ought to feel in duty bound to do so. Moral support at Yale has become a very necessary thing of late years...
...result of yesterday's ball game must be very satisfactory to the college at large. For the work of the battery must remind us all of the Brown game of last year. We are now a tie with Yale for first place, and we feel confident that no lower position will be accorded us by the result of the scheduled games. Yet the infield must be more careful in their play. There is no reason for the one run which was given Brown yesterday, but the loose work of the infield. If this fault is remedied, the championship will...
...involve, and little need be said in answer. For all who are interested enough in the matter to become informed, know that the loss of time occurring from the pursuit is absolutely infinitesimal, when compared with the courage and perseverance which are thus inspired. The students of Yale may feel that, whatever shall be the action of their faculty, they will receive the sympathy of their friends at Harvard. Later advices state that the report circulated is without foundation. The words with which Professor Richards is credited, however, seem so decisive that we await more precise information...
...department. First of all, the department has no head. It is a disgrace to Harvard College that it has no full professorship in German. This condition of irresponsibility probably accounts for the absolute lethagy which has characterized this department of instruction. Some one instructor ought to be made to feel the necessity of making strenuous efforts to improve the students' facilities for pursueing so important a branch of study. We cannot sufficiently deplore the loss which the college sustains in the departure of Mr. Wheeler, whose able teaching has been much admired and enjoyed by all those who have taken...
...afterwards compiled by the Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor. It was the wish of those engaged in the work that these facts should speak for themselves, and the general attention that has been called to them, and the conclusions derived from them by the thinking public, they feel have not been unfavorable to the cause...