Word: feels
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...feel that the adoption of the new scheme will result in a far more unifled and effective grouping of the athletic and academic events which mark the close of the College year...
...James Bryce, an adopted son of Harvard, the CRIMSON offers on the part of the undergraduates a hearth welcome. Even though we may not have all seen him before, many of us feel that we have come to know him s we have read through the pages of his "American Commonwealth." Because we feel that he understands us as a nation better than all but a very few of our own countrymen, we realize what an opportunity it is to hear him this evening upon our national problems of forty years ago and today...
...starred courses in the Catalogue, seem "primarily for graduates." If so, he will be happily surprised as well as pleased to read the lively summary of 1911's Student Life and Athletics, the story of the New London race, and the sketch of the International Games. But he will feel in all, in illustrations and in text, in biographical sketches, in essays, and in the solid narrative of Commencement Day, the largeness and the nobility of his University--only a small part of which is in the Cambridge he knows; the best of which is wherever Harvard men are thinking...
...adviser may feel that his work is finished if he has written a letter that has not been answered. He argues that if the Freshman does not care enough to answer a letter, he will care still less to see its writer. Yet a very little thought must convince him how many other reasons there may be for his not having received an answer, other than mere in difference on the part of his advisee. The letter might not have reached the advisee, or his reply might now be lying without any means of being forwarded in the post office...
...fully described in the revised rules that will be distributed by the committee. In his preliminary remarks, Mr. Babbitt gave the officials some advice with regard to their expense bills and also intimated that many of the colleges had not done all in their power to make the officials feel that they were the guests of the institution on the days of the games...