Word: feels
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...dark sea of misery and crime, which was so near them. We give a man the name of drunkard or tramp, said the general, and then turn away in disgust and think we have done with him. Yet the tramp is still a man; he can feel cold and the gnawing pangs of hunger; he is still suffering and in need of sympathy. There are three classes of people whom the Salvation Army means to labor for. The first is the destitute, hungry and distressed; those who are forced from poverty to live in the slums. The second...
...While it is acknowledged that a field exists for an 'alumni weekly,' which the CRIMSON is in a position to cultivate successfully, the editors of the CRIMSON now feel that such success might be gained at the expense of the Graduates' Magazine, which is doing for the University a great service which such a publication probably could not do. They have therefore unanimously voted not to publish the proposed weekly. As this publication was of evident advantage to them as editors of the CRIMSON, we desire to state the cause of this withdrawal, and we believe that all graduates will...
...give a transcript of part of an address given by George Walton Green, Harvard '76, of New York, at the Pennsylvania dinner in New York last week. In a letter to the CRIMSON Mr. Green writes: "Those of us here who are deeply concerned for the future of football feel that the only chance of saving the game lies in the recognition of the facts on which I tried to lay stress - that we must encourage better public opinion in college life on the evils that must be eradicated." Mr. Green's remarks on football follows...
...have heard much talk of late about the overwhelming importance which intercollegiate athletics have come to assume in the college world. I am myself one of those who feel that the apotheosis of the athlete has gone too far; he has been set on too high a pedestal. The fault is not with the young men themselves. Indeed, what impresses me the most is, that in spite of all this publicity and laudation they should bear themselves with such becoming and attractive modesty. How is it possible for any young man to see things in their true proportions, to feel...
Every undergraduate must feel some natural interest in the 'varsity crew, but that interest will necessarily die if all information about it is strictly refused...