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Word: hearted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...first place it appears that it is a great deal worse to break physical training than it is to break mental training. This is strange, especially when we realize that in material harm to the team (which today is acknowledged to be nearer the undergraduate heart than any other organization) probation far exceeds an occasional forbidden cigar or theatre party. It is far worse to Iose an excellent athlete for a whole season than to let an equally brilliant man break training once or twice a year. The opposition will say that with training...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE UNDERGRADUATE OPINION OF PROBATION. | 1/22/1912 | See Source »

...known technical school, successful and perhaps well up the ladder in his particular field of mechanics -- electricity, automobiles, or what not -- regret that he did not take four years for a college education when he still had the chance? His very success in his technical field rankles in his heart, for he sees the highest rung of the ladder on which he has started not far beyond his reach. A few advances will put him at the top, and there he must stay, unable to step over to another ladder whose height towers far above his own. His college-bred...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LIBERAL VS. TECHNICAL EDUCATION. | 1/6/1912 | See Source »

Tickets at $1.50 and $1.00 have been placed on sale at the Co-operative Society's store for the Christmas mystery play, "Eager Heart," which will be given in Copley Hall, Boston, on Monday evening and on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. This play, by Miss Alice Buxton, the English authoress, has met with great success in London during the last few years. Several Harvard men are in the cast this year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tickets for "Eager Heart" on Sale | 12/9/1911 | See Source »

This year have we not learned by heart that lesson which overconfidence teaches? Three of the classes now in College witnessed the bitter disappointment of last year's Yale game, (many of the present players participated in it) and all of us saw what effect the Brown game had on the Princeton game this year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A FIGHTING CHANCE. | 11/20/1911 | See Source »

...coaching second to none; every man on the team, as Captain Fisher has said, is a fighter; but if, at the outset of an important game, any player makes a mistake and the opposing team seems to "get the jump" for a moment, the student body seems to lose heart and to desert the team. Thereafter, the players must combat not only the strength of their adversaries, but the discouraging pessimism of the whole Harvard stands...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 11/13/1911 | See Source »

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