Word: respectely
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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After reading portions of the third and fourth Philippians, Dr. Hale said: We can't read far in Paul without entering into his joy in the Lord. We are to think of Paul as a university man, influenced largely as young men are by great respect for the past. At first submissive to the duties imposed upon him he began to chafe under the restraint, and later keeps referring to the joyful day that made him free...
...spent in attending them would be but a waste on his part. It may perhaps be too strong to apply this to college men in general, or to assert that they think attendance at prayers unmanly; but it is true that the average undergraduate is lamentably indifferent in this respect. Yet there must be the recognition that the few words spoken by the college preacher each morning are, by their directness and perspicuity, especially adaptable to the work of every day life, and that while they appeal to the moral they also appeal to the intellectual and practical side...
...defeat for us nevertheless and Harvard looks upon it as such, and will bear it worthily. That the team was a failure, however, she will not admit. Every man who witnessed that game was and is proud of the eleven and has nothing but the deepest respect for the men who composed it. The whole college, too, is grateful beyond measure for what each and every one of the coachers has done, to Arthur Cumnock and Perry Trafford particularly, though the others are deserving of unlimited praise. A new era in our football history has begun, an era when...
...only what he was forced to do. He exalted very high his duty to himself. His hand was always against his neighbor if it would be to his advantage. It is not strange that such a narrow way of looking at the world should produce an exaggerated self respect. With this went a great regard for personal strength and courage. If for any reason their qualities failed he had a regard for intellectual strength. He admired trickiness and cleverness reaching almost to dishonesty; in fact the clever lawyer was the man who had a great resource of tricky devices...
...does not play together and why we do not win. And this is exactly what is being gone through again this fall. Yale has the advantage over us in having practically arranged her men, and in having excellent team work. Her playing last year was almost perfect in this respect. Nor, still further, whatever may have been the condition of affairs before the change was made, does the change itself bring about satisfactory results. As we have said, this shifting policy is a bad one-it has proved so one, and yet this the policy again this year...