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Word: sentiments (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...first glance this sentiment appears somewhat startling. But a second thought will show the statement to be absolutely correct in describing the club situation as all Harvard men should wish it to be. In fact the "power" so-called, of clubs at Harvard, is individually so meagre that a New York newspaper recently published three pictures: Yale's Skull and Bones, the Princeton Ivy Club House, and the Harvard Union, under the general heading of influential college societies. To Harvard men the picture of the Union grouped by the side of the Bones house may have generated a strain...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CLUBS | 4/26/1912 | See Source »

Again, many members of the Faculty believe that the present period of over two weeks should be shortened; but the general sentiment seems to be that while much time is wasted, no better results will be obtained by increasing the strain at the examination period. Professor Palmer maintains that any loss of time is offset by the benefit which good students receive from the opportunity to thoroughly review and co-ordinate their work...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXAMINATIONS. | 4/2/1912 | See Source »

Were this our only ground against the sentiment of the Herald editorial, we would surely be held for making a mountain of a mole-hill and quibbling over a point which was after all a matter of opinion. We cannot close our eyes, however, to the deduction that any College student might naturally draw from the Herald's conclusion, i.e. that earnest intellectual effort in College has after all little effect upon intellectual achievement in the Law School, and that if a man only makes up his mind to work hard i the Law School, it makes little difference whether...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHERE THE BEST SCHOLARS GO. | 3/20/1912 | See Source »

...members of the squad who have worked hard to bring the season to a successful end, the CRIMSON takes this opportunity to offer its heartiest congratulations. We believe we express a strong undergraduate sentiment when we say that this year hockey has taken tremendous strides in the athletic interest of Harvard men about Boston. For this reason the outcome on Saturday was all the more gratifying...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE 1912 HOCKEY TEAM. | 2/26/1912 | See Source »

...songs by past members of the club formed an agreeable element in the program. Of these, first mention should be given Mr. Foster's "On Beaches and Dunes" for its harmonic individuality and charm of original sentiment. Mr. Sweet's "Warum sind die Rosen so blass" was a close, second as regards sentiment and workmanship. As a whole, the club is heartily to be congratulated upon the signal success of its concert...

Author: By E. B. Hill ., | Title: MUSICAL CLUB CONCERT | 12/19/1911 | See Source »

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