Word: waiting
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...careful consideration which we may be sure it will receive. Our only hope is that the answer may come as soon as is possible, and that it may prove to be in accordance with the best sentiment of the college. Meanwhile, as the question is pending, the students should wait patiently believing that the Faculty will decide for their good...
...money will be forthcoming, even if it does take a little self-sacrifice and denial. Remember this, Harvard men, and do your share towards helping your crew to "show four miles of river to the crack New Haven crew" next June. And, as we have said before, do not wait to be called upon personally, but send or give your subscriptions in at once to the manager of the crew. He has so much on his hands that it is well-nigh impossible for him to visit each man. Therefore, be generous and aid him in his work. For this...
...every man that it is his bounden duty to come forward immediately and support the cause of the crew, prove the existence of true patriotism at Harvard, and uphold the athletic honor of his University. Above all, it should be remembered that such aid is wanted immediately. Do not wait to be called upon personally, but hand in your subscriptions at once...
...eighty-eight board resigns the care and responsibility of the arrangement of the CRIMSON into the hands of eighty-nine. It has been usual policy for the senior board to wait until late in the spring before tendering their resignations. It has however seemed to the board a more satisfactory and fitting arrangement for the senior editors to resign at the beginning of the new term and of a new volume of the CRIMSON since they have other work to do in this the last lap of college course...
...justifiable? By what power does he voice the sentiments of the majority in college, when he probably does not know more than twenty or thirty men-and those men in his own class? It seems to me that it would be far more fitting for this miniature Solomon to wait until he becomes an upper-classman, before he makes such childish and impertinent attacks upon those who probably know more about college affairs than he does. Let us hope that "Adolphus" will subside and not reflect discredit on his class by such a puerile display of inanity...