Word: find
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...predict, will be a pleasant one - from a Harvard stand point. Everyone knows how much cheering helps an eleven on to victory; everyone knows, too what a tremendous audience Princeton will have to support their team, and what a small, though hearty, delegation of Harvard men New York will find. Everyone who has a few dollars to spare should...
...suits for the Law School drum corps are made by J. F. Noera. Students will find at his store a complete assortment of rosettes. All orders promptly attended...
...grounds for the eleven. The committee appointed at the last meeting, consisting of Messrs. Quinby, '87, Dexter, '90, and Norman, '90, reported that the field adjoining Felton Hall could be leased for four years at the cost of $150. It was voted that the committee be empowered to find out the expense of improving this field, and report at the next meeting to be held at 28 Grays, on next Tuesday evening. The triangle opposite the Law School is to be used this autumn for practice...
...have dwelt long on these first principles, because in them I find the key of all the meaning of the college festival. All thankfulness for the past, all hope for the great future depends, I think, in this; on whether the university which we profoundly love has grown towards, and shall continually grow more and more into a full obedience to the great masteries, a full acceptance of the great elemental influences and supplies on which all life must feed, into the fuller and fuller relation to God, and universal human life which can alone make her and keep...
...Christian Church larger than the discipline of the Puritans, in which the discipline of the Puritans had floated as the part floats in the whole. The discipline of the Puritans felt that which was pressed on was tempted by it, and at last broke open in the attempt to find it. Experience was larger than Whitfield. Dogma was larger than Henry Calvin; life was larger than theology, and so, one after another, in these which are the concentric spheres within which human nature lives, the successive opening of the partial into the universal and the temporary with the eternal, came...