Word: hope
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...smaller college. I have met a great many noble fellows. The whole tenor of the college seems to be that of mutual help. I could not have chosen relations more pleasant than I have here, and I am situated far more pleasantly than I had dared to hope I could be. Harvard has been grossly misrepresented and slandered in every...
...Yale '94. This is another game which depends almost entirely on the support which the teams receive. We have been urging the University as a whole to attend the intercollegiate games. The freshmen are most emphatically included in this number who ought to go to New York; but we hope that such a large proportion of the rest of the college will go to New York that a goodly number of freshmen can be spared to accompany their nine to New Haven. University games are always of the first consideration; but a freshman contest with Yale is important enough...
...that men do not give in proportion to what they can afford. It is to them especially and to those to whom the management has been unable to make a personal request that this appeal is directed. The crew is badly in need of money; without it we cannot hope for success. It remains for the college to do its share in bringing this success...
After the election of officers, the club elected the following members: Resident, George Hope Mairs '89; Harry S. Wardner '88, and W. Franklin Brush '88; non-resident, Arthur Rotch '71, Graham Jones '91, and Clement S. Houghton...
...would seem from this letter that all hope of games with Yale this year were at an end. We are not in a position to say anything more definite on this subject than that the final settlement of the matter of games is in the hands of the Graduate Advisory Committee on base ball. Whatever is done by this committee the college is confident will be well done...