Word: expectations
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...foot-ball meeting last evening showed great activity in rushing to the defence of that much abused sport, yet something more than empty words will be required to put a team worthy the name into the field. After the enthusiasm displayed, the college has a right to expect that Jarvis Field will be well tenanted this afternoon...
...sides is heard a call for larger accommodations. Harvard needs at least three dormitories, an annex to Memorial Hall, and money for countless objects. We cannot expect that all of these wants can be satisfied in one day, but there is one deficiency which ought to be supplied at once. N. H. 5 has been declared open to only a majority of those who wish to take it, for the simple reason that there is not a sufficient number of microscopes to supply the demand. It is a great disappointment, to all of the unsuccessful applicants, and it would appear...
...training, and the graduation of '85 has in a degree disorganized the twelve, yet the number of good players in college is sufficiently large to furnish a strong team, which, by earnest training, may be brought into form sufficiently to represent fittingly the university in the proposed game. To expect the twelve to defeat the visiting team is almost idle, for the Montreal Club has, it is said, the strongest team in America. What we do expect is that the crimson will put into the field a twelve capable of giving a worthy exposition of the game, and able...
...slip 'twixt the cup and the lip," says the old proverb, and Harvard at different times has had the truth of the maxim sorely impressed upon her. The championship undoubtedly hangs upon this game, for if defeated by the weakest club in the inter-collegiate league, how can we expect to overcome our strongest opponents? But defeat we do not expect. For we, the college, feel confident of the result because of the little over-confidence that has been shown by the nine in the games which they have played this year. They always have played with remarkable steadiness...
...fail to see what object the instructor can have in view in setting such a paper, unless he wishes to test the students carelessness, and not of his intelligence. The custom, however, is founded in antiquity and supported by long practice, so we suppose it is idle to expect any change, and the student might as well accept his fate in the same spirit that he submits to other evils...