Word: joy
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Pierce (B), W. G. Simon and R. A. Wells (C), S. L. Wolfson (D), E. K. Maxfield (E); Sect. 13, A. C. Hawkes (A), B. F. Jones and S. B. Shaffer (B), J. K. Tebbetts and D. B. Adams (C), H. C. Place (D), H. W. Joy (E); Sect. 14, L. A. Mahony (A), A. Gorman and R. B. Street (B), R. K. Terry and H. S. Hagerty (C), G. E. Seltzer (D), E. Dunbar...
...Reed (A), H. E. Pierce and J. B. Clark (B), W. G. Simon (C), S. L. Wolfson (D), E. K. Maxfield (E); Sect. 13, B. F. Jones (A), A. C. Hawkes and S. B. Shaffer (B), J. K. Tebbetts (C), H. C. Place (D), H. W. Joy (E); Sect. 14, A. Gorman (A), L. A. Mahoney and R. B. Street (B), R. K. Terry (C), G. E. Seltzer (D), D. E. Dunbar (E); Sect. 15, T. E. Alcorn (A), W. K. Royal and H. S. Warren (B), J. G. Carey (C), H. G. Eisenstadt (D), H. E. Settle...
...sure, playing on the second team is not all joy and glory, but it is just as important as playing on the University team, if the latter is to beat Yale. A successful football team is the greatest possible force for creating and developing loyalty and unity in the University. A victory at the end of the season reawakens the graduates' interest, and for a time at least welds the whole undergraduate body firmly together by the single impulse to rejoice...
...Little '10 urged that men should "think seriously, but compete laughing." They should work hard, but take joy in competition. Captain Jaques of the cross-country them then spoke on the work. In this numbers is one of the essentials. Another is spirit. These produce the winning team. Coach Shrubb stated that the prospects for this year are good. This sport is one of the hardest of games, however, and work must be done with a vim to make it a success. Style is very important in order that a man should be able to run miles without tiring himself...
...life in the development of his personal power. Suffrage, moreover, leads to greater ideals, for the voter must took forward to doing for coming generations what eight generations have done for him; he must realize that he is sowing the seeds of future prosperity or future poverty, of domestic joy or suffering...