Word: warrant
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...strong men. For the half mile and two mile runs there is a distinct lack of promising material, and in the pole vault the loss by graduation of Bascom Johnson will be keenly felt. Under Murphy's training the men have developed rapidly, and the material seems to warrant the belief that the track team, as a whole, will be stronger than the 1900 team...
...implication in this circular that officers of instruction in the courses in Economics aid in coaching of this kind, or are "in touch" with it, is quite without warrant. And it is hardly necessary for me to say that assistants and other instructors do not engage directly in tutoring in their courses. The statement above quoted is simply a misleading advertising device. F. W. TAUSSIG...
...general it cannot be said that the Harvard team has improved enough to warrant any confident estimate of its possibilities. This unusual backwardness in development is due to the many changes which have been necessitated by slight injuries and to the unusually strong competition among the candidates for positions in the line. On the offense the team has improved but there is still a marked slowness in getting the ball into play and there has been a good deal of fumbling behind the line...
...committee requested to try the voices of applicants for a representative University chorus to go on a concert tour abroad, having heard the voices of over sixty, has decided that neither sufficient musical nor vocal talent has appeared to warrant the formation of such a chorus. George L. Osgood '66, W. A. Locke '69, Arthur Foote '74, George A. Burdett '81, W. R. Spalding '87, Lewis S. Thompson...
...Lewis, R. Fincke, E. Loughlin, R. F. Bolles, C. W. Jaynes, E. Kendall, W. Kendall, W. M. Rainbolt, H. A. Minton, A. Black. This list is neither complete nor final. Additions will be made as soon as men of unknown or doubtful ability show promise sufficient to warrant such promotion...