Word: trusts
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Thanksgiving Day, and Harvard students without exception should give thanks. The proximity which we bear to Boston has alienated Harvard from New York so much that added to our inferiority in foot-ball this University does not figure much in the thoughts of the people at that city. We trust that the old rule of having the two teams highest in rank play in New York will hold good this year, that is as far as we are concerned...
...were going to play against Princeton on Saturday, I was obliged to guess at the team, and, with one or two exceptions, probably guessed wrong. But the captain of the 'Varsity eleven probably knows what is best for the interests of Harvard in foot-ball, and will, I trust, forgive me for "letting off steam." I must apologize for taking up so much of your valuable space...
...been composed of studious, industrious men, and even if it has not sustained its originally literary character, yet it has served to bring together in a pleasant, social way, those members of each succeeding sophomore class, who could certainly have sustained it as well as did their predecessors. We trust that the plan now under consideration for forming a new literary society may be eminently successful, and that we shall soon hear that the Everett Athenaeum is flourishing again under its old and respected colors...
...should not attain nearly as high a standard as those of the great debating clubs at Princeton, for instance, yet there usually seems to be but little effort on the part of five-minute speakers to do more than merely exercise their voices for the benefit of nobody. We trust that the eyes of the officers of the Union may become riveted on these justifiable complaints, and may stick there until there owners arrive at some satisfactory way in which to elevate the tone of the "general debate...
...Equity Jurisdiction," a continuation of a paper which appeared in the preceding number. This article is one of great philosophical depth, and though beyond the comprehension of the layman, is a very lucid exposition for the members of the profession. Mr. F. J. Stimson contributes a paper on "Trusts," in which he makes a very strong case against the irresponsible corporations which have grown up and become such a feature in the American business world. He points out forcibly the unfairness of permitting such institutions to continue under their present form. The practical experience of the Standard Oil Trust...