Word: felt
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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First Sophomore.--Bow, H. deF. Lockwood '25; 2, R. H. Ames '25; 3, G. M. Grinnell '25; 4, C. W. Felt 2E.S.; 5, F. J. Gindorff '25; 6, J. J. Hollister Jr. '25; stroke, A. L. Smith...
...department, and others, have urged that the university should offer a course in the Psychology of Love. A correspondent to the Daily Maroon, with no little eloquence, demands; "Why are teachers silent on the psychology of love? Why is discussion so limited? Probably because the problems of love are felt to be unsolvable...
...Your letter to the Registrar about your son has been given to me. I am sorry to tell you that in the Freshman Halls, where residence is compulsory, we have felt from the beginning the necessity of not including colored men. To the other dormitories and dining rooms they are admitted freely, but in the Freshman Halls, I am sure you will understand why, from the beginning, we have not thought it possible to compel men of different races to reside together...
...Fridays between 5 and 6 o'clock. Each applicant will be assigned to a member of the society qualified to help him in the particular field of study with which he is having difficulty. Consultations will then he held as often as the advisor thinks desirable. If it is felt that the student needs detailed tutoring in a specific course, a professional tutor will be recommended...
...Year's night Mr. Walter Hampden revived Massinger's "A New Way to Pay Old Debts". The audience felt a trifle conspicuous in the vast emptiness of the Opera House, but the comedy soon put them at ease. It is a pity that revivals must always be veiled in the odor of sanctity, to be approached only with the deference due to age. Philip Massinger did not write for antiquarians and students of literature. He wrote for the gallants and ladies of Elizabeth, for their drapers and tapsters, their coachmen and chambermaids--and he won them...