Word: doubting
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...hall - such a result would be truly deplorable. It perhaps will deserve an investigation, if serious complaint is made in regard to it. The Advocate will certainly cry out again for Mr. Balch's scalp. If it can get it this time it will certainly deserve it. We doubt...
...unless the safety touch was made to enter into the final score. And it naturally followed that this would make the best basis from which to reckon higher scores. A touchdown now equals two, a goal from the field five, and a goal from a touchdown six safeties. No doubt can be entertained concerning the relation between goals from touchdowns and those otherwise kicked. Our game with Princeton showed the immediate necessity of a precise definition in such cases and the disputed point served to naturally strengthen our set of rules. Considerable is still left to the referee, especially...
...gentlemen who have undertaken to canvass the college for subscribers to the reading room are meeting a very fair success, but do not receive such ready support from all quarters as should be accorded them. There is little doubt that the required number of names will be secured, but that is not enough. There should be at least three hundred men who will use the reading room. With this number an institution can be established that will be worthy of the college and fit to be compared with those at Yale and other colleges. Energetic management and liberal support will...
EDITORS HARVARD HERALD: Now that all the doubt and uncertainty surrounding the Thanksgiving recess has been cleared up, I think it is time to give the college some expression of the views of a large body of students who did not approve of the measures made use of by two of the papers to obtain a longer recess. I was just as anxious for the two extra days as any one in college, but I do not think that the way to gain such a concession is by ambiguous editorials inciting students to take an unfair advantage...
There should be no doubt manifested by '86 in regard to accepting immediately the challenge of the Harvard freshmen. Nothing will have more power to cement the old time friendship of the colleges, and help to make them forget the late difficulty, than these races from which no danger of a quarrel or misunderstanding can ever be apprehended. [Columbia Spectator...