Word: hoping
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...training quarters, grand stand, etc., unless sufficient is raised by subscription. Besides all this the association should buy new seats for the gymnasium meetings as soon as possible as the wear and tear caused by the bringing of seats in from outside is very injurious to the building. I hope it will be clear to you that for these improvements, outside the regular expenses, the association will be in need of money, and that you will not complain if the price of tickets for the gymnasium meetings is kept as high as it has been in former years...
...complete, made by its crews, with the record made in the past year in general athletics, in tennis and in lacrosse, the college can reasonably afford to be well satisfied. The successes of the past will demand new successes in the future. A healthy feeling of confidence and hope must succeed the feeling of despondency that has often prevailed in the college. Thus with classes larger than ever before and with the cheerful spirit inspired by success, all those interests which occupy the leisure and constitute the recreation of the students may look to be well served...
...changed my mind. I shall stay by this river until Yale is Victorians, even if I remain a thousand and one years to come-and I fear that if Yale does not change that unfortunate stroke I shall be waiting here until the odd year arrives." After expressing the hope that the Harvard men would not paint the whole town red, the governor retired amid the cheers of the crowd...
...hope that the freshmen will support their nine in their third and decisive game with Yale today. It is needless to enlarge on the advantage of having a large crowd of Harvard men present at the game, as this is self-evident. The freshmen should not be content to rest on the one victory they have won, but should endeavor to win the series, and give Yale to understand that the Harvard freshmen have broken the charm of Yale's success. It is unfortunate that their university men should have been obliged to play so many games immediately preceding...
...University crew and have not paid their subscriptions, the necessity of paying at once. The crew is in need of money, and after the splendid victory of Wednesday there should be no hesitation both in paying subscriptions already handed in and also in adding new subscriptions. We hope that this will be borne in mind, and that the labors of the treasurer of the crew will be lightened as much as is possible by the prompt payment of subscriptions...