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

...repeated too often that no demands, however great, made on us left at home can equal the sacrifices that those who have answered the call to the colors, may be asked to make. Therefore, anything we can do to lighten their burden we should feel it a privilege...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Buy Smileage Books. | 3/1/1918 | See Source »

...normal conditions if the strain of rebuilding were shifted to less tired shoulders. It will be hard enough for her to return to every-day social and economic life without the added burden of having a large part of her territory to rebuild. Our cities, which will never feel the strain of war to such a degree, can rebuild the devastated towns with half the effort it would cost the French. The results would be immediate and lasting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: REBUILDING FRANCE | 2/28/1918 | See Source »

...that we are willfully careless. We all feel subconsciously that college work does not count so much now. It is a natural feeling, but it is none the less fallacious. Study is difficult, but it is more important than it has been for years. And so we demand from you, Mr. Undergraduate, whether you are hoping to be in service soon or not, that you do your utmost. Those who are on probation may have arrived there through excusable sins, but they deserve to be treated with gloves no longer. They are a disgrace to a Harvard attempting to give...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OUR WAR-TIME WORK | 2/27/1918 | See Source »

...which with a more difficult military schedule this spring, they bid fair to do. Any ruling which militates against strict attendance at drills will tend to weaken the R. O. T. C. and the University Ensign School. We welcome Dean Briggs' insistence on the service requirement for eligibility and feel that our teams so constituted will be worthy of representing us against Yale and Princeton...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ATHLETIC ELIGIBILITY | 2/26/1918 | See Source »

...contributions of Mr. Jayne, who really ought to stick to verse if he can't write decent prose. Here is a specimen that the late A. S. Hill should have lived to study: "It is not so much a respect for obtaining these rhymes that we feel, but rather that he is able to work them into a poem so facilely." This gem adorns an essay on "The Inimitable Ingoldsby Legends." Eventually, we foresee, Mr. Jayne will get round to the works of W. S. Gilbert...

Author: By F. SCHENCK ., | Title: Editorials of Current Advocate Timely, Sane, and Well Expressed | 2/25/1918 | See Source »

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