Word: liking
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...question of a memorial has been considered informally but carefully by a number of members of the class and by several of the class officers. I should like to have it known that the concensus of opinion is that action on this matter should be deferred until after the close of the war, at which time it will be eminently proper for the University or the alumni, and perhaps for the individual classes, to create a permanent memorial to the Harvard men who have met their death fighting for whichever cause they believed to be the right one in this...
...either make or break her --Cornell. Harvard has been working hard on her defence since Haughton took charge, and the Ithacans will be certain to run up against a barrier on Saturday. Whether they will be able to smash or top it remains to be seen. It isn't likely the Crimson will produce anything elaborate on attack; it's difficult to see how she can. Cornell, judging from the Bucknell game, isn't as far along as she'd like to be, either. Trouble on the ends has stayed the forward rush of the eleven. So far as making...
...panels put in at that time I believe that this wish and expectation of the architect has not been fulfilled. If such a panel were put up it would add to the beauty and dignity of the room and others might be placed with it in commemoration of men like Henry Farnsworth '12 and Victor Chapman '13, who also have given their lives for France...
...first place, all the books in an enormous library like Widener are not on different subjects entirely. There are repetitions, thousands upon thousands of them, clothed in different works, different letters and even different languages. There are a thousand channels to the same end. The ideas that men live by, and which give the foundation for specialized development in the future, are not numerous. Emerson says it in the words, "Nature is an endless repetition of a very few laws. These laws which determine a man's character have been recorded through the ages," "Character is greater than intellect...
...Harvard spirit of open-mindedness, and tending to destroy some of our internal loyalty between the Faculty and the student, or perhaps within these respective groups themselves. The principle of fair play is fortunately very prominent here in Cambridge. These articles which appear to have sprung up like mushrooms over night and without visible origin or reason, have a quality of feeling rather than of fairness. Whatever purpose or result they may have, we undergraduates should maintain the important consideration of loyalty and respect towards our professors, more worthy than the rash acceptance of uncertain insinuations. E. L. FLORANCE...