Word: live
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...alumni of Harvard who live in and about Boston seem to be less active and to take less interest in the welfare of their University than the alumni of any other college. Just now the graduates of nearly every college which is represented by any sufficient number of men, are dining together, and talking over the condition of their respective institutions. They take a real interest in keeping up with educational advances, and each man is anxious to help the governing body of his college in the effort to raise the standard. Harvard graduates do not show the same zeal...
...this way, since the whole system of registration is a fabricatian of the Faculty it will be within the province of the Faculty to act upon it. This scheme is well worth striving to put through, particularly in the case of the great number of men who live at long distances from Cambridge...
...work which would be omitted if Saturday were included in the recess is very small; it is not commensurate with the hurry and unpleasantness of leaving one's home in the midst of the New Year's Day festivities. Moreover there are a great number of men who live at long distances, very many of whom have no, or only one, recitation on Saturday, but who nevertheless must register on time, and then spend their Sunday in no amiable mood thinking of the pleasant time they might be enjoying but for this unhappy regulation...
...holding in the Harvard line; so the run did not count, and the ball went to Yale. Bliss tried but was stopped without gain by Dean. McClung, however, made a pretty run of fifteen yards, being finally stopped by Cumnock. Wallis, B. Morison and Rhodes managed to squeeze out live yards through the centre. Bliss tried the same avenue and found a resting place beneath Cranston; Finlay received Wallis with brotherly warmth; and on the third down McClung tried in vain for a goal from the field. Trafford allowed the ball to roll across the line, and it was then...
...Everett then compared the great teachers of religion in the light of his fundamental principle of a great world religion. Buddah, he said was tender, loving, and full of the spirit of humanity. But his religion taught men to withdraw from the life of the world, and live on charity. This then was not a religion to minister to man's needs...