Word: felt
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...track team will lose by graduation 10 men who won places in the Yale and intercollegiate meets. Of this number, the loss of H. Jaques, Jr., and H. W. Kelley '11 will be the most keenly felt, as they scored between them 15 points in the dual meet with Yale and two points in the intercollegiates. The loss of such a number of men will of course cause a weakness in a number of events but fortunately there will be available in 1912 some good competitors who were unable to participate in track sports this last spring because of sickness...
...only position on the team where a hole will really be left is at first base. Milholland of this year's Freshman team seems the most likely man to take Hann's place. Captain McLaughlin's loss will be felt both in the box and in the field, but there will be Babson, Wigglesworth, Clifford, and Kelly for the outfield, from this year's team; and Felton and Beebe, who were both ineligible this year, are likely to be the mainstays in the pitching line, if they have satisfactory relations with the College Office at that time. In addition, Boyle...
...knowledge; one of his bills was for nearly three pounds of tobacco, pipes and the like for the Corporation. We learn that in 1744 the Reformer was abroad, thundering, "As for the Universities, I believe it may be said their light is now become Darkness, Darkness that may be felt," Morris's tombstone bore this inscription...
...agent selected for this exploration was Dr. Martin R. Edwards, one of the young men who had from the first felt a strong interest in the undertaking. Money was raised to defray Dr. Edwards's expenses; and he devoted seven months to diligent inquiries and observations in the chief cities of China, and especially among the medical missionaries and practitioners already established there...
...some leadership, of a supreme order, might be of service to Harvard, and through Harvard to the country. Older graduates remember, gratefully, the good they gained from James Russell Lowell, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Asa Gray, Louis Agassiz, and other leaders of men, who were lecturers, and the regret they felt that Harvard did not employ John Fiske, J. H. Choate, J. C. Carter, George Bancroft, Francis Parkman, J. L. Motley, Ralph Waldo Emerson, W. H. Prescott, and others like them, as regular lecturers or professors...