Word: trusting
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...honor to its class and to its college; and for its cool, steady play of Saturday, is worthy of the highest praise and congratulation. More than this we cannot say, but in the name of Harvard we present our thanks to the members of the freshman nine, and trust that the example they have set for future freshmen may be followed in the same spirit of enthusiasm and loyalty to their Alma Mater, as has been shown by eighty nine...
...would like to say a few words to eighty-nine on the eve of the game with the Yale freshmen. In another column we publish a communication from a member of the class, which should be read by every man of eighty-nine, and which we trust will bear good fruit. The freshmen should be ashamed that such a complaint should be necessary to stir up those who, either from sheer laziness or from meanness, refuse to do everything in their power to bring victory to the nine. At least the freshmen should feel bound to make as good...
...Princeton, Yale, or Harvard, and besides, she has not the reputation for base-ball which her three older sisters have established. But for this very reason, her men should receive at least a decent welcome when they come here and play a plucky game against such heavy odds. We trust that in future, the reputed in difference of Harvard men will not show itself in so marked and discourteous a manner, even though they have such a potent excuse as "examinations...
...unless in the future celebrations over ball victories are less demonstrative this year will be the last in which Yale will be allowed to contest for the intercollegiate base-ball pennant. We can fully sympathize with the students who wear the blue from our experience in foot-ball. We trust that the report which is now current, that Yale will probably in any event be prohibited for playing ball next year, is without foundation. If Yale should no longer be allowed to enter the contest, there is little doubt that much of the interest which now attends the games would...
...make strenuous efforts to defeat the wearers of the blue in this coming game. Should eighty-nine win this second game, they will bring to Harvard an honor which she has not yet attained in the memory of undergraduates - that of defeating the Yale freshmen in both games. We trust that the freshmen will realize the importance of a large attendance on Saturday, and we are sure that the nine, individually and as a whole, will strive earnestly to prove itself a credit to its class and college...