Word: feeled
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...deeply to be regretted that the committee on the reading room has found it necessary to abandon for this year the plan of keeping up that institution. Financial reasons and lack of support, we are told, account for this decision. Few student enterprises we feel sure have been so wholly beneficial in their influence as has the college reading room. It has certainly been a great convenience to many, and its loss will be seriously missed by those who have been wont to patronize it. The committee may have been somewhat hasty in deciding to give up the plan...
...with regret that we feel called upon to notice the fact that the shingle thief has not yet been detected, and compelled to give up his dishonorable practice. We sincerely hope that no college student at Harvard has of late years ever been guilty of the very silly and reprehensible action of stealing signs, whether society shingles or private advertisements. If it is an outsider who is thus causing annoyance in the college, it is high time that the Cambridge police brought the offender to justice. If it is a student, it is to be hoped that the college sentiment...
Many complaints have recently been made regarding the disobliging spirit evinced by one of the attendants at the gymnasium. We should advise all who have cause for complaint in this respect to speak to Dr. Sargent, and we feel sure that the matter will be remedied at once...
...recitations on the Friday and Saturday after Thanksgiving: but many students are kept in Cambridge on the holiday by unwillingness to cut recitations and lectures on those days. The number of students who take advantage of the rule regarding voluntary attendance is so large that many of the instructors feel bound to repeat their lectures in the following week, and thus the men, who, from over-conscientiousness or other reasons, have been unwilling to cut, in the end gain nothing by their faithfulness to their work. The petition for extension has already received many signatures, but needs many more before...
...class. Their athletic meeting was a great success, and their pluck and push is bound to prove very valuable to the athletic interests of our great rival. Let Yale, '86, take notice, and do every thing in her power to aid in maintaining our present high rank." Praise, we feel sure, that the freshmen have very deservedly won. May their exertions not falter until success in every field has crowned their efforts, and through their aid the championship in athletic sports, so long withheld from Harvard, may be reclaimed. Then in 1886 may the freshman class rest content with...