Word: felt
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...long time followers of football have keenly felt this desire. Especially is this the case with fans in the west who object rather strenuously to their fellow fans of the east resting all too complacently on the fallacious assumption that because their teams do represent the staid old east they play the superior brand of football. Fans in the west have for some time now quite strenuously objected to this unwarranted supposition, and deny that there is any sound basis for it until it is proven in actual play on the gridiron...
...yesterday, enjoying a respite from scrimmaging, P. Jenkins and E. S. Gehrke, the two dependable backs that largely compose the Yearling offense, did not report at all, being excused on account of injuries sustained Saturday. Both will be back in the line-up before the Yale game. The team felt the effects of the Princeton game, for when Coach Ryan ran it through a brisk signal drill, it left the field very much exhausted...
Sedgwick was again at the tackle position on team "B." When asked after the game how he felt, he answered that his neck had not troubled him in the least and that in his opinion he would be perfectly able to start the Princeton game Saturday...
...long been felt that advanced American students, when continuing their studies in Europe, have not availed themselves to any adequate extent of the great advantages offered by the French Universities in every branch of science and learning. A main reason has been be cause these have not been sufficiently brought to their attention. It is therefore proposed to encourage the development of a body of university scholars who by personal acquaintance with French achievements will be in a position to restore in all branches of American public opinion the just status of French science and learning...
...unsolved questions of our time and, as yet, there seems to be no satisfactory solution. We feel deeply the lack of raw immigrants every day, when we are forced to pay unheard of wages to the unskilled laborers. Yet in times when we have had immigration, we felt equally keenly how they tended to lower our standards of living. Conditions on the East Side of New York were unbelievable. In 1914, there were more Russian Jews there than in the city of Warsaw, and more Italians than in the largest city in Italy. Immigrants were coming in at the rate...