Word: felt
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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During the winter months a scarcity of exercise, felt in many quarters, always comes upon Cambridge. Why is it, then, that the teams in the minor sports continue, year after year, to have few candidates and to be of lower caliber than the size of the University warrants? Wrestling, swimming and gymnastics have had a precarious existence for some time; basketball fell by the wayside long ago. Yet these same sports are enthusiastically entered in to at all other colleges. Undergraduates are content to have Harvard lamely represented in the minor sports although these offer an opportunity of great physical...
...injustice of Harvard's reputation in certain quarters for snobbishness and for indifference has long been keenly felt by those connected in any way which the University. The editorials reprinted below seem to indicate that what remains of a widespread popular feeling is being broken up, and that the University is at last coming to her own in the eyes of the public...
...opinion of 41 seniors on the much mooted question of a Yale Union was found to be 30 ayes and 11 nays. Considerable interest is felt on the subject of a possible Union. The Rev. Lyman Abbott, D.D., of New York City, preached at Battell Chapel Sunday morning and addressed meeting in Dwight Hall in the evening...
...Faculty prohibition of a graduate committee, we are sure that it will be removed when the full force of the demand for the new gymnasium is felt. Meanwhile work should go on toward mustering that force
...done until the unredeemed pledges have been paid up. The pledge of a gentleman will always be met in the end, which means that the unpaid pledges still represent real financial interest, that measure of enthusiasm which has so often been used in the matter. If it is felt that the pledges must be redeemed at one, we can only suggest as a means to that end the hateful task of personal dunning which seems so distasteful to the writers of the communication. But we do not admit that in the meantime 1917 must go uncanvassed. Graduate action, of course...