Word: thinks
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...induce the alumni to consent to all future games taking place in New Haven, Cambridge, Princeton, or possibly Springfield. This would involve the erection of large grand stands at these places, but that item is necessary at Springfield now and the element of rowdyism would, the faculty think, then be avoided...
...thing that is beneficial to his health for that reason alone. In the next two months we are sure to hear endless schemes and proposals for reforming the game most, of which will be utterly worthless. We believe that if the men who intend offering advice will stop to think a moment of what they feel were the worst features of the game last Saturday, and will then consider what the effect would have been had the present rules been rigidly enforced in all instances, they will be not a little surprised...
...managers of the eleven think that the same team will be put in the field against Princeton next Saturday that faced the Tigers last year, as Greenway is getting into condition and expects to be able to play. Armstrong has been filling Jerrems' place on the Yale team since Saturday last...
...light of these resemblances some of us may think the characters much the same, only different editions of the same girl. But they are poignantly different. Viola was a tender, delicate creature, almost sentimental. Rosalind also had some sentiment, but with it was combined so much humor that it was rather lost sight of. She laughed on every occasion, perhaps because she was conscious of being the cause of so much laughter in others. Beatrice had little sentiment; just enough for a great lady, of which she is Shakspere's best type. In this she differed from Viola and Rosalind...
...Roosevelt appeals to the interest of Harvard men in particular, not simply because he is a graduate, but because he is one of a circle of young Harvard men who are showing the utility of the training received here in the practical work of politics. We think it would not be too much to say that no recent Harvard graduate has won a more enviable reputation in national politics than Mr. Roosevelt...