Word: hope
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...days members of the Association must decide whether or not this satisfactory arrangement is to continue. We sincerely hope it will. It would be folly of the worst sort to take another jump in the dark, when the Association is flourishing as never before at this time of year. Men who are satisfied with fish and eggs will undoubtedly vote against any change; others would do well to remember that at the present reasonable rates considerable meat may be had, well within the figure to which the weekly price might soar by a return to the old system...
...They say youth is the season of hope, ambition, and uplift--that the last word youth needs is an exhortation to be cheerful. Some of you here know, and I remember; that youth can be a season of great depression, despondencies, doubts, and waverings, the worse because they seem to be peculiar to ourselves and incommunicable to our fellows. There is a certain darkness into which the soul of the young man some time descends--a horror of desolation, abandonment, and realized worthlessness, which is one of the most real of the hells in which we are compelled to walk...
...aiming at some practical solution of the recognized difficulty--or, as has been suggested, recognized misunderstanding -- against which the western man must contend. Our contributor this morning offers some instructive suggestions, which may well be added to those already advanced by and through the CRIMSON. No university can hope to appeal purely by academic reputation to the preparatory schools that are ignorant of the real conditions of its undergraduate life. That, of course, must play a large part; but life at Harvard means more to us than the mere study, for which primarily we have come to Cambridge. It means...
...will" for "shall" in a recent notice appearing over my name is due to the fact that the notice in question was conveyed from my house by telephone, to the CRIMSON, after my sudden and urgent departure from Cambridge. I make this remark with the hope that it will spare me the receipt of additional anonymous postal cards regarding this matter. These in one way are pertinent, in another grossly impertinent. J. D. M. FORD...
During the past few years, however, interest in the club has dwindled to a serious degree, its membership diminishing from as high as 600 to its present enrollment of less than 250. It is with the hope of reviving the old interest and developing collegiate interest in rowing that the present move is being put on foot...