Word: felted
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...then briefly outline the need for men which is felt in the various branches of this philanthropic work? At the Harvard Free Reading Room in East Cambridge there is a distinct and immediate need for Harvard men to assist in organizing and conducting clubs of the children of the district. The influence and prestige of the Reading Room have grown rapidly in the few months since its foundation, and the organization is powerful and popular enough to exert a strong influence in the community about it. The circulation of books is the least part of the scheme of the Reading...
...high jump, Weston in the mile run and Boardman in the quarter mile are strong men. For the half mile and two mile runs there is a distinct lack of promising material, and in the pole vault the loss by graduation of Bascom Johnson will be keenly felt. Under Murphy's training the men have developed rapidly, and the material seems to warrant the belief that the track team, as a whole, will be stronger than the 1900 team...
...members of the class of 1904, we wish to extend to you our sincerest sympathy at the death of your son Willard. As his college life was so short, very few men knew him, but his loss will be greatly felt by them, for he was loved and admired by all his friends. For the Class, JAMES A. BURGESS. JAMES JACKSON. ROBERT LANE. RALPH SANGER. F. L. COLLINS. N. A. HIGGINS...
Professor F.G. Peabody, spoke of Dean Everett in a more personal sense. He was not only the leader among his colleagues in the Divinity School but was their adviser as well, and since his death professors and students alike have felt the lack of the sympathetic and ready counsel that he gave. Dr. Peabody spoke feelingly of the unconstrained relations between the Dean and his pupils, and gave an appreciative description of Dr. Everett as he appeared to his friends. He was a man of great clearness and loftiness of moral vision. He seemed to see and realize better than...
...editorials are a trifle sleepy, except the one urging a new bridge on Boylston street. The need of this improvement has doubtless been felt by every man who has listened to the creaking chains and rusty joints of the present structure. "At the Gate" by R. W. Child '03, is very obvious as far as the plot goes, after the first page. The effort to introduce more of the college element into college stories, however, is commendable and does much toward making it acceptable to undergraduate readers. "From Oxford to Henley-on-Thames," by F. R. Dickinson '03, is pleasantly...