Word: think
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...sugg stion and are ready to undertake a series of five meetings in Boston. We do this with a full sense of the significance and seriousness of such a movement, and we feel that success will be best obtained by committing all details to the students themselves. We should think it best to hold these meetings as soon as they can be conveniently arranged. Each of us stand ready to give such assistance and advice as he can personally offer, but we all desire to feel that the movement is in the hands of students, to be carried...
...propelling force is manually performed. In asserting that a "crew in proper training and condition should be able to row two (four mile) races on consecutive days," they lay themselves open to challenge. The Columbia men have turned out excellent crews for the past few years, but we scarcely think they would be willing to row a four-mile race with Yale on the day succeeding that with Harvard, and a little reflection would show them why. In spite of our esteemed contemporary's remarks, then, we see no reason to change our opinion as expressed in the column...
...have two a week during this good running weather, why might we not have an occasional fast hunt? On some of the runs it has been very disagreeable, and even dangerous, for the fast runners to be obliged to wait continually for slow men to catch up. I think there will be a large attendance at a fast hunt if the Association will only organize...
...trespass upon your space to-day merely because I am unwilling that the "Graduate," who was so violently attacked yesterday, should think that the undergraduates as a body have any sympathy with such an effision as appeared yesterday...
...have heard many fellows express their apprehension at the uncertain make-up of the rush-line, but most of them, I think, recognized that this was due as much to our bad luck in having some of our best men laid up as to anything. We have perfect confidence in our 'Varsity captain; but it is far better to "growl" a little in our anxiety than to sail on in calm and sublime confidence simply because we beat Wesleyan 110 to 0. This confidence is nothing but an other phase of "Harvard indifference," or whatever the proper name...