Word: think
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...possible a wrong impression, which has obtained a certain currency in the college. It is believed by some students that our signals, used in the Springfield game, were made known to the Yale team by the Yale men in our Law School. In the first place, I do not think that Yale knew our signals and in the second place I believe that the Yale men in our Law School acted in a thoroughly honorable manner. Not only did they, when requested, agree to keep away from the practice, but they also voluntarily, before being so asked, agreed...
...should like to call attention to a matter which I think deserves consideration. The winter trip of our musical clubs. Every year practically the same circuit is made - Washington, Chicago, Cincinnati, St. Louis, etc. The smaller cities of the west and all the cities of the south are ignored, If the object of these winter trips is to awaken an interest in Harvard in the sections of the country where little is known of the University - the clubs have certainly mistaken their mission if we are to judge from the circuit they take. Indianapolis, Omaha, Denver, Louisville, Nashville and Atlanta...
...yesterday and after some forty minutes of ordinary play, spectators were excluded from the grounds and the gates locked while the men practiced the tricks they will use in the game tomorrow. This afternoon the team will leave in a special car for New York. Princeton men seem to think their team will give Yale a harder rub than she had last Saturday...
...careful inquiry as it gets influence over immature or imperfectly trained minds. I venture, therefore, to speak plainly, by way of a professional warning to the liberal-minded public concerning Dr. Abbot's philosophical pretensions. And my warning takes the form of saying that if people are to think in this confused way. unconsciously borrowing from a great speculator like Hegel, and then depriving the borrowed conception of the peculiar subtlety of statement that made it useful in its place - and if we readers are for our part to accept such scholasticism as is found in Dr. Abbot's concluding...
...Dyke said, "There are two general principles in regard to the gospel which I think every person of common sense will admit. The first is the principle of adaptation, and the second is the principle of permanence...