Word: supporting
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...training required to make a winning team is long and arduous, and men will not go through it unless they are sure that their efforts will bring recognition. The men have worked hard and faithfully but without that entnusiasm which is necessary for victory. To this lack of support the defeat of Saturday may be directly traced, and, until this support is given, it is hopeless to expect Harvard to regain her old supremacy in lacrosse...
Last Friday evening the freshman Glee and Banjo clubs gave their last regular concert of the season. They certainly are to be congratulated on the work which they have done. Never before has so large an amount of money been raised for the support of the freshman crew by freshman musical organizations, and the members of these clubs deserve all the heartier praise on this account. The most of the success this year is due to hard work. Both the Glee and Banjo clubs have practiced unceasingly since their organization last fall, and conscientious and painstaking work has been done...
...freshman musical club have had an unusually successful season. They have given in all about six concerts. All the money received by the clubs at these concerts-about two hundred and fifty dollars-has been turned over to the support of the freshman crew. This is much larger sum than is usually received for the support of the freshman crew...
...this concert. The clubs have left nothing undone which may help to make the concert creditable in every way, and it is to be hoped that the members of the class will take advantage of the opportunity both for showing their appreciation of the clubs' efforts and for supporting the crew. It is needless to say that the management of the crew is in want of the heartiest financial support from the class at large. The crew so far has made a very creditable showing, and it is only its due to give it every chance for victory which...
...contradiction of the Revolutionary principles but a step nearer a republic than the reactionary Bourbonism had been. It proved, however, impossible for the new king to follow the movement toward liberty, and he was driven from his throne. The government of Napoleon III again obtamed the support of the nation by promising to recognize the principles...