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Word: feelings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...income from this Fund, besides many incidental expenses which are necessary to keep 800 men in touch with each other and their College. The members of the present Senior Class have showed themselves too loyal to each other and to Harvard to fail in this respect, and we feel sure the request printed today will meet with the generous response it deserves...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1907 CLASS FUND | 5/8/1907 | See Source »

...says. It is very safe to say that the majority of students in these courses where disturbances occur with systematic regularity do disapprove the method of expression at least. Without the least pretence of being in a position to preach against the faults of some childish students, we do feel that the majority should rule and not sit indifferently or with forced smiles while the same few, from self-appointed authority, make jokes of lectures and nuisances of themselves. It is a College tradition not to bear witness against a fellow-student; but there is an equally well-established tradition...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DISTURBANCES IN LECTURES | 5/4/1907 | See Source »

Overlooking several similar inaccuracies which, however, detract materially from the value of the article, we do feel that many of the general conclusions at which Mr. Whitney arrives are true, and hurt the more because they are aimed at tender spots. "There is always slandering of one sport or another, always some official or specially appointed committee of this, or that, or the other branch of athletics. There is always some unpleasant reflection on sport in the morning papers with the Cambridge date line." And how true those statements are. In the past we graduates and undergraduates, athletes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MR. WHITNEY ON ATHLETICS | 5/3/1907 | See Source »

...least one department namely, in the fact that the board is much larger. The board of the Sun includes only ten men, who regard the paper purely from a business standpoint. The CRIMSON also has a social side which is lacking at Cornell. We feel at Cornell that we are a trifle nearer Harvard than any other University, and our relations in this respect are continually growing. In fact, a number of the original members of the Cornell faculty were Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANNUAL CRIMSON DINNER | 4/29/1907 | See Source »

...some years it has seemed to many that the formal resolutions of a class were a cold and inadequate way of expressing sympathy and sorrow for the death of a Harvard undergraduate. There are others than classmates who feel such a loss, and yet shrink from the usual expression of sympathy for one reason or another. It seems to us that Harvard is not too large or too impersonal to take some notice in morning Chapel of the death of a member of the University, and if some simple and appropriate service could be arranged and his friends and classmates...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN UNDERGRADUATE DEATH | 4/27/1907 | See Source »

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