Word: feeled
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...most inexpensive way. It seems to be taken for granted that the nine and crew will always exist and that the papers will always appear regularly, but the fact that such luxuries cost money does not seem so well known. The students as a body seem to feel that somebody will pay the bills, and that they need not trouble themselves. Such a state of affairs is a shame. It is a shame that the continuance of a paper so much a part of Harvard life as is the Lampoon should be endangered, or that the work of the nine...
...feeling annually aroused by the time fixed for the regular spring vacation certainly deserves to meet more consideration than it has hitherto received. After the work of the mid-year examinations it is but natural that everyone should feel pretty well tired out, but no attention whatever is paid to this fact; recitations continue regularly, and as a result little work, if any, is done for a week or two by the students. Then, just as everything gets in running order again, a vacation comes to break in upon the work, and necessitates an entirely new start. Such a state...
...rule far better than those of last year, and all are determined to make a hard fight for the lead. The rules of our faculty necessarily do much to handicap the nine, and the lateness of the season is another drawback. In spite of these disadvantages we feel sure that our club will make a good showing, and hope that the students will do their share by encouraging the nine by their presence at the opening game this afternoon...
...illustrations. In this respect the April number can not fail to satisfy the most exacting. Mr. Closson offers to us the first result of his trip to Europe in his reproduction of part of Murillo's "Immaculate Conception;" all lovers of engraving in wood can not but feel that this picture alone is worth more than the price of the magazing. The other features among the illustrations are the drawings of Mr. Gibson, illustrating Mr. Roe's novel. Mr. Dielman's drawing for the same novel, and the drawing of Howard Pyle on the "Impressment of American Seamen." Mr. Gibson...
...have to be kept up by weekly installments as under the present arrangement. In such courses as Political Economy 5, 6 and 7, which occupy one hour a week throughout the whole year, the system of half courses for half a year might well be tried, and would, we feel sure, be attended with beneficial results, both in the number of the students and in the interest felt by them...