Word: hoping
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...announced this year again that if there are enough applicants to fill Hollis, Stoughton, Holworthy, and Thayer, the Corporation will remodel an entry of Weld in the same way. If 1913 is to keep up the record of the last two classes it will be necessary. We hope that every 1913 man will turn out for the smoker in the Union on Friday night and will hear from President Lowell himself the importance of the place of the Senior dormitories in University life...
...classes before ours. Men who live in the Yard now should move into the Senior Dormitories. They will find better equipments. Men living at home should spend the last year left to them with their class. No man whose time is divided between his home and his college can hope to get into the spirit of undergraduate life. It is in the evenings that much of the best in college life is seen. Men living in private houses and dormitories off the Yard should move into the only dormitories devoted exclusively to Seniors. Let us take advantage of this last...
...authors. The CRIMSON wishes especially to call the attention of the College to the Harvard Night at the Shubert tomorrow (Friday) evening. It is not a duty for us to attend and to show our support of Mr. Knoblauch's play: It is an opportunity, and one which we hope the College as a whole will take advantage of, to show its undivided loyalty to a Harvard man and to Harvard's interests in the drama...
...view of what happens after mid-years in the way of theatricals and athletics, we urge that the whole College--athletes, editors, and prospective Phi Beta Kappa men, turn with a will toward making up for past deficiencies and storing up credit at the Office for possible, though we hope not probable, future expenditure...
...expected. The CRIMSON has already commented on the importance of his trip in the interest of world's peace: the trip itself now sinks into insignificance in comparison with the greater present work of recuperation in which other than Harvard men are taking an eager interest. We hope that President Eliot may soon be able not only to make speeches on the other side of the world, but to return to Cambridge to continue the work and the rest with which he is blessing the country at the present time...