Word: feels
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Cambridge. While those who have been chosen to give to the English athletes the formal greetings of the University and to provide for their entertainment, will do all in their power to make the visit a pleasant one, there is not a man in the University who does not feel a personal interest in the hospitality which will be extended today...
...known member of the class of '95 who is not now in Cambridge wrote thus in a letter received recently, of his connection with the union; "I learned more in my work there in the last two years than I could have learned from a hundred books, and I feel broader and better for my experience. The union I shall always look upon as one of the chief formative influences of my college career." There are a hundred and more recent graduates from Harvard who would bear similar testimony...
...with Yale University in meeting the universities of Oxford and Cambridge in an athletic competition in this country next autumn, has been referred to the Harvard Committee on the Regulation of Athletic Sports. We appreciate highly the courtesy of your invitation, and it is with much regret that we feel obliged to forego the pleasure of the proposed competition...
...people have given themselves with marvelous devotion, where there has not been the highest skill there has been at least the greatest self-sacrifice. There is, therefore, a call today upon the public spirit of university men - that wherever they may be, and whatever profession they may enter they feel a responsibility for the common schools, and by work and sacrifice do their part in strengthening our republic in its foundations My other point is a very different one, - This nation has, we believe, a great and peculiar mission in the history of mankind...
...communication which appears in another column is printed solely as an example of one style of writing which we shall in future refuse to accept. The communication column of the CRIMSON is not intended as a place in which any member of the University may feel at liberty publicly to insult the paper, or to air any and every fancied grievance against it. A certain amount of calm criticism of our own attitude we have never refused to publish; but extravagances like those of our present correspondent we shall hereafter receive in the personal spirit in which they are written...