Word: looks
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...gruelling, prize-fighting game, nor is it one especially adapted for blacksmiths, stevedores or life-guardsmen. Nor is it particularly famous for shouldering, shoving, hauling, kneeing and mass-plays. Nor is it played by men in buckram, so padded and protected that the players' grandmothers cannot look at them without a shudder. But it is football, and the kind where the player punishes the ball and not the man. And a man can play it successfully without any strain upon his sense of fair-play or honesty and without any danger of being tempted to forget he is a gentleman...
...leaders in the country it is natural, said Dr. Abbott, that we look to collegebred men who should be endowed with one, at least, of many advantages--a little learning, some wealth, a social position more or less assured, and a fair amount of persistence. Four more important qualifications, however, are indispensable to true leadership. In order that he may draw his followers on to something greater and better, the leader must have a definite vision firmly fixed in his thought: he should look forward, not back, and, like Moses, Paul, Napoleon, Bismarck and Lincoln, must be not a traditionalist...
...look for the hockey team is also promising. L. B. Purnell is the only member of last year's team to be lost by graduation, and the following members of the team will be able to play this year: Captain R. H. Leake '05, C. C. Levis '07, A. F. King '05, J. Zahnizer '07, J. Chislett '07, E. L. Rafferty '06. Twenty-seven candidates reported on December 6, for the first practice of the year, most of them trying for forward positions. An outdoor rink for the use of the team is being constructed on the tennis courts below...
...seeing Him who is invisible." This statement, said Dr. Van Dyke, is a record of the victory of the seventh sense. Besides the ordinary five senses, and common sense, which should be added to these, there is another, the possession of which distinguishes man from beast--the power to look ahead and comprehend the invisible. This keen perception of the unseen, or, as it sometimes is, merely the power of putting two and two together, has been a characteristic of the most eminent men of history. Without it such leaders as Moses. Washington, and Lincoln, or scientists like Newton...
...Look at the way we smash and rip 'em through...