Word: prospective
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...better position in regard to mounts than ever before, the Polo Association has a brilliant season in prospect. Veteran Malletmen from the team which made the semi-finals in the Intercollegiate tournament last year will be pressed for positions on the team by several newcomers. The lineup in the opening exhibition game will probably find Captain F. S. Nicholas '33, at back, Lowell Dillingham '34 at No. 2, and either W. C. McGuckin '34 or T. J. Davis '35 at No. 1. Nicholas, Dillingham, and Davis were all captains of their Freshman teams. Part of the Varsity squad will...
Contradicting reports appearing recently in newspapers to the effect that he had received offers to play professional football next year, J. W. Crickard ocC, stated that he had not received any definite offer from professional teams and had not given the prospect serious thought. Also in regard to the East-West football game to be played in the Rose Bowl, in Pasadena, California, in which Crickard has been mentioned for a position on the eastern team, he denied having made any decision as to his participation. Since he has completed his athletic career at Harvard, a charge of professionalism cannot...
...prospect of modification has caused a frenzy of excitement among brewers, ex-brewers and would-be brewers There has been tall talk of hundreds of millions to be spent on expanding and modernizing present equipment. While wise-acres discounted predictions that beer would put a million jobless to work, there was no denying the fillip it would give to allied industries...
...loudly assured the country that this year the platform means something, may be accepted as gospel. What it means, however, has been differently interpreted by different speakers and commentators. Though calculations as to what the President-elect and his party will do are difficult and risky, the general legislative prospect is roughly as follows...
...Vagabond loves not a cold ride through tortuous traffic, even though he may find a goal in a new haven. No more is he thrilled by the prospect of a makeshift bed in the room of one to him had stranger. Even more reluctantly does he embrace the task of wresting precious tickets from the hands of those whose God-given work it would seem to be to keep them hidden in the filling cases on Harvard Street. Then there is the bitter disappointment when he reaches for the flagon, and finds only the flask...