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Word: feelings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...training and excitement ought not to be a matter of so little concern to the students. Of all of the different athletic games, it surely is the one in which the least general interest is taken. The autumn is the height of the polo season, and if anyone should feel interest enough to go out to the grounds and see the game, he would become fascinated with the sport, and be eager to make an attempt at play...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Polo at Harvard. | 10/28/1885 | See Source »

Some comment has been made upon the freshman game at Southboro which may lead the freshmen to feel their position with reference to foot-ball rather desperate. Nothing has been more familiar in past years than for our freshman foot-ball elevens and base-ball nines to encounter defeat at the outset. How familiar to us have grown such phrases as "freshmen rattled," "wretched game," "decided brace," etc. It is the custom for freshman teams to feel defeat. They need it. But to draw too hopeless a conclusion from defeat is not the means to accomplish a necessary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/27/1885 | See Source »

Prof. Laughlin may feel obliged to make Pol. Econ. I more select, unless better work is done by many of the students at present in the course...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 10/24/1885 | See Source »

...strenuous efforts to acquire rooms despite his efforts to the contrary. Notwithstanding this, the innocent should not be made to pay the penalty due the guilty. At least there should be formulated a set of rules governing the action of the bursar that the students who are compelled to feel the weight of the financial rod might know by what regulations they are pressed to the wall. The complaints which have reached us have come from angry hearts and seething brains. While we can easily (far too easily) appreciate the feelings of these men we would counsel that the citadel...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 10/23/1885 | See Source »

...first number of the long expected Harvard Monthly appeared yesterday. With it we feel justified in saying opens a new era in the student literary life of Harvard. Established with the express purpose of affording a medium for "the strongest and soberest undergraduate thought" of the college, it offers to solid literary work an incentive which has ever been wanting in this university. And it is especially fitting that the initial step in this direction should be made by the present senior class, a class which possesses so many men of marked literary ability...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Harvard Monthly. | 10/22/1885 | See Source »

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