Word: expected
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...fixed hours. Nothing of the kind is intended. On remarking some time ago that students cannot be driven anywhere by regulations, I was contradicted by the dean of another institution who insisted that by regulations they can be driven to the Devil. I accepted the amendment. We expect to rely upon creating the right environment, upon the influence that can be brought to bear by instructors, by upper classmen and by the leading figures among the Freshmen themselves. Good traditions are the mainstay of good order, and they are not hard to form and preserve, if they are rational, normal...
...hockey season, in preparation for which practice is even now under way, will soon be at hand, and it is but reasonable to expect that the interest shown in the games this year will be as keen as ever. However, the hockey team is handicapped by the lack of a rink, which it may call its own, and so must go to Boston to play its contests in the Arena. As a result, undergraduates who wish to see the games are forced to pay a high price for seats which do not necessarily enable them to sit together...
Certainly it is the firm desire of every member of Memorial Hall that this institution shall be run at its maximum efficiency. But if the service is interrupted and the food wasted as it has been on several occasions recently, no one can expect the management to render complete satisfaction to all concerned. On two or three Friday evenings within a month good lusty enthusiasm in the form of hearty singing and cheering has degenerated into unseemly contests of sugar throwing and mimic battles with bread. Such methods of expressing enthusiasm are quite beyond the bounds of gentlemanly conduct...
...reason; it has its proper place and time when displayed in a proper degree. Gentlemanly and rational conduct is always required of Harvard men, and enthusiasm which is destructive to furniture and productive of riot is not to be tolerated even in support of a winning team. While we expect a great deal of enthusiasm to be shown preceding the remaining football games, we ask that it be kept within the bounds of reason. If there should be a recurrence of such trouble in Memorial Hall, ringleaders should be sought out and summarily punished. However such strict measures should...
...special arrangement with the Associated Press and the Western Union, the Union will receive the returns from the Presidential election Tuesday. The bulletins will be procured just as promptly and will be just as complete as those sent to the newspapers and public gatherings in Boston. It is expected that they will begin to arrive about 6 o'clock in the evening. They will be posted on a blackboard in the Living Room, and the building will be kept open until the issue is practically settled, unless the interest of its members ceases before that time. The management does...