Word: enthusiasm
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Judging from the enthusiasm shown last evening at the first mass meeting of the year, the student body has unusual confidence in the ability of the football team and is eager to manifest this confidence by earnest expressions of enthusiastic support. It is such confidence and support on the part of the students that give the football team an great increment of winning spirit and added desire to justify the hopes and expectations of its supporters. With such unbounded enthusiasm and confidence behind them the members of the University team will surely play on Saturday a game that should bring...
...football mass meeting last evening both in point of size and of enthusiasm was one of the most successful conducted here in years, a crowd which filled the Living Room of the Union to overflowing turning out to hear the speeches and to practice songs and cheers for tomorrow's game. Beside the speakers and leaders, the eleven men who will start against Princeton were seated on the platform...
With the football game with Princeton but a few days distant, it is small wonder that all of us are in an unusual state of enthusiasm and excitement. Sixteen years have passed since a football team representing Princeton has played on our field, and so the game this week arouses an extraordinary amount of interest. Tonight an opportunity is afforded to show this interest and enthusiasm, the occasion being the first mass meeting of the year. Certainly there is no lack of enthusiastic support for the team or of confidence in its ability to win in this game...
...this evening at 7 o'clock in preparation for the Princeton game on Saturday. In view of Princeton's recent victory over Dartmouth, this game is now, next to that with Yale, the most important contest of the season for the University team. It is therefore essential that undergraduate enthusiasm be organized at once...
...that the number of students sufficiently interested in music to subscribe to such a paper would be much too small to insure it life and financial health, or at least in comparison to its older brothers the "Monthly" and the "Illustrated." And, no doubt, the very fact that enough enthusiasm was generated among the students to produce even the initial number of a paper which contains only material of a purely musical nature will, people, induce on the part of many inhabitants of our College world and elsewhere a healthy state of speculation and inquiry...