Word: dependant
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...interested in the Boston concert of the glee and banjo clubs for the benefit of the university crew. It should be remembered that this concert cannot be advertised, and that its success will in large measure depend upon the efforts of any of us who can let our friends know about it and do whatever else we can to arouse an interest in it. It is to be hoped that some time the Boston concert may become a regular fixture, expected by Boston friends of the college. When it does it will not need advertising...
...junior class dinner have had a blue book at Leavitt and Peirce's for several days only a few men have signed for the dinner. The committee is doing everything in its power to make the dinner a successful and pleasant affair, but the outcome of their efforts will depend in a large measure upon the number of men who attend it. This dinner affords the first and one of the few chances which the members of the class will have to get together in a social way, and every man in Ninety-two should improve it, even though...
...great success, we look forward to a winning team. But both Yale and Princeton also send excellent reports of the condition of their intercollegiate teams, and each declares that her chance of making a line showing is very good. It will not do, therefore, for Harvard to depend upon the result as it appears when figured out on paper. The result depends on what is done on the track, and this depends directly upon the character of the work done throughout the training season...
...have been shown an anonymous circular advertising type written notes of the lectures in Chemistry A. with sample. Students are warned that they cannot depend on these notes. By purchasing them they will waste money; in using them they will waste time, and if they rely on them they will be liable to fail at the examination...
...teams were backed by the best sentiment of every Harvard man. He assured the men that whether they won or lost, their honest efforts would be appreciated by the graduates of Harvard. Above all he assured them that the enthusiasm of Harvard men in New York does not depend on victories or defeats for its favor, but on the steadiness and manliness with which the name of the university is upheld. They can bear every honest defeat with equanimity and greet with heartfelt joy success in any possible direction...