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...prayer for colleges was observed in Boston by a meeting yesterday of workers in the various college societies. Reports were read showing what the colleges and universities in New England are doing in religious work. Professor F.G. Peabody '69 stated that a renewed religious activity has been manifest at Harvard since the establishment of the Phillips Brooks House. Mr. Henry D. Wright of Yale, reported that sixty five per cent of the total enrolment of Yale University are church members, and from Williams College it was reported that out of 378 students sixty per cent are active members...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Day of Prayer. | 1/26/1900 | See Source »

President Hadley: "With regard to the Yale spirit at the present time, I can say from my heart that it is a thing of inspiration. Never has it been more fully manifest in students, in the faculty, in the administration, and in the graduates. The work of the athletic season, during the past six months, has not been anything to boast of outside; it has been a thing on which inside among ourselves we may congratulate ourselves for. Beginning in the autumn with discouraging prospects, Captain McBride and his men have worked faithfully and the college has supported them. Never...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Some Yale Sentiments. | 1/26/1900 | See Source »

...addition to the strong undergraduate desire for a carefully supervised system of training which was made manifest at the mass meeting shortly after the movement began, the college sentiment has been sounded in another way. Out of 598 members of English courses who were requested to express their opinions in daily themes, 502 declared themselves strongly in favor of the proposal. Of the remainder, some were opposed, but most were indifferent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Report on Physical Training. | 5/28/1898 | See Source »

Since Lieutenant Robinson expressed his opinion, that in view of the conditions then existing it was the duty of every young man to learn the tactics of military drill, developments have been many and important, and now this duty is manifest. Since then also, not only have many undergraduates already identified with military drill in the State militia, volunteered for the public service, but a number have enlisted as raw recruits. As individuals these are to be commended for their patriotic enthusiasm, but it seems possible that the mass of young college bred men can prove more useful if they...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/27/1898 | See Source »

...should take the form of a regular debate with main and rebuttal speeches by each competitor. Such a system we feel certain will guard against any unwise choice, will make all of the contestants feel that they have a more thorough trial, and will not be open to the manifest objections which we have pointed out in the present system...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/7/1898 | See Source »

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