Word: boundingly
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...minutes. As for the fluke by which Dean secured the ball and ran down a clean field, the only explanation is that he broke through and touched the ball as it was leaving Barbour's fingers, changed its course and was lucky enough to pick it up on the bound while he was running at full speed. The ball did not touch either of the Yale halfbacks during this play...
...Cambridge has never before seen such indefatigable work on the part of an athletic captain; it has never before seen such faithful training on the part of the candidates for the team; finally, it has never itself given the team such hearty and encouraging support. The result is bound to show-today, we believe, and in the future, we know...
...nevertheless be sure that our world of seeming things in space and time must conform to rigid laws, such as the law of causation. For our active understanding, in thinking our world, is bound by its own nature, in order to preserve as it were our very sanity (or, as Kant would say, the Unity of our self-consciousness), to regard all observed facts as conforming to laws. Yet these laws of Nature, which science studies, are the very creation of our own understanding acting upon the data of our senses. Such laws are not the laws of an unknowable...
...ignorant as we are of all absolute truth, confined as we are for all theoretical knowledge to the seeming world of sense and understanding in space and time, we are yet morally bound to postulate that the real world of the things in themselves is a Divine Moral Order; i. e., we are and absolute Moral Order were known to us to exist...
...judges were Dr. Hart, Professor Kittredge, and Mr. E. M. Mason. The prize was a handsomely bound copy of Cushing's "Law and Practice of Legislative Assemblies...