Word: reasons
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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While we are on the subject of the freshmen, a word to the class eleven will not be out of place. These last days of practice are the ones which will tell most. The team is playing a fair game and there is no reason at all why it should not settle down in the remaining days of practice to the really first class work of which it is capable. Now that the 'varsity game has been lost it is more than ever incumbent upon the freshmen to represent the college well. Remember, Ninety-five, that no Harvard freshman foot...
Aside from the personal character which the dispute has unfortunately taken the controversy is interesting as indicative of the keen philisophical spirit prevalent in America. Philosophers as such are apt to be thought of as existing in a state of unprejudiced calm and guided by a reason which hardly would admit of enthusiasm. The following spirited paragraph in Professor Royce's critique, which is said to have been the principal cause of the controversy, suggests, however, that philosophers may become very much interested...
...sharp work scored immediately. The second touch down for Yale was not a "fluke." No one was interfering for Corbett, who, in his struggles to get away from Hinkey, dropped the ball. Then Yale's close following of it and her clever interference won the touch down. The reason that Harvard's offensive work failed was, as has been said, because her excellent ground-gainers had the benefit of no interference; and because Trafford's punting had to be made on the defensive and was well returned by Yale...
...method followed in disposing of the 2100 ticket placed on sale yesterday morning, the criticism of it has been anything but temperate. The plan of issuing extra orders to those who offered adequate reason was not an entire success perhaps, but it worked much better than anyone would admit yesterday. It prevented the speculators from securing any considerable number of seats and distributed the tickets among the students as effectually as any other method which has been tried. Orders for extra tickets were given only after an assurance that they represented several undergraduates or graduates and would not speculate with...
...thoughts in these discussions, he said, have been centored upon the presence everywhere and at all times of a great Reality. We have used the words Power and Reason as being truly descriptive of that Reality. We have seen that the knowledge which that power must have of the sympathetic creatures which it has made, suggests the presence of something like sympathy in it. We need not be surprised at finding something like feeling in the Eternal Force. No one knows force who thinks of it simply as producing physical motion. Plants, animals and men show us other aspects...