Word: prided
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...defeats, has of course been too pitifully unsuccessful for the people to call "satisfactory." In points, the team lost to Harvard by a considerable margin. Of losing teams, gratitude, often frigid, is the usual consolation. But in Captain Ketcham's eleven every man of Yale takes just and exultant pride. Its struggle from impotence against Colgate to excellence against Princeton has never been surpassed by any Yale team. Its playing against perhaps the best football machine that ever represented Harvard brought more honor to Yale than many an actual victory over inferior Harvard teams. Its fight Saturday, though of course...
...clock about sixty undergraduates and graduates gathered around the John Harvard statue in the Delta to celebrate the 304th anniversary of the founder's birth. Mr. W. C. Lane '81 gave a short eulogy addressed to the person of John Harvard as represented by the statue, expressing the pride we feel in bearing his name A. F. Pickernell '14, assisted by a number of the Chapel choir, led in singing "Fair Harvard," which was followed by a cheer for John Harvard and a regular College cheer...
...come to perform these duties of citizenship they will realize more and more the necessity of them and their benefits, and will take more pride and pleasure in doing them, until, let us hope, the man who honorably and zealously does his duties will be deemed and applauded just as worthy of praise as a soldier who has gallantly gone through battle...
...have not taken advantage of their opportunities. The Union management, by reducing the fee from ten to five dollars, has done all in its power to make it easier to join, and by so doing has sacrificed all customary procedure to present need. As a matter of class pride alone, it is to be hoped that the slight increase in the Freshman membership necessary before the whole class is allowed to attend the meeting scheduled for next Wednesday will not prove an obstacle to the success of that occasion...
...Graduates' Magazine have a memorial character. Hardly a quarter passes in which there has not occurred the death of some distinguished alumnus of the University. The commemorative articles which appear in the Magazine, however, have but little tinge of sadness. Their note is one of gratitude and pride. Such is the case with the leading article in the March number, on Dr. Arthur Tracy Cabot, for many years a member of the Corporation. The Corporation, as undergraduates perhaps need to be reminded, consists of seven persons--the President, the Treasurer, and five Fellows. These are the legal holders...