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Word: suspected (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1890
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Usage:

...freshman glee club and a freshman banjo club have been among the first organizations to be effected. This year, so far as we can ascertain, the glee club has not progressed so far as to select a leader and no banjo club has been formed at all. We suspect the fault lies chiefly with the 'varsity organizations, which have a general charge of the beginning of the freshman clubs, but which have been absorbed this year in the Christmas trip. Whosever fault it is, it is unfortunate for all concerned. Freshman clubs, especially those of a social nature...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/2/1890 | See Source »

...freshman will have the best wishes of Harvard when they meet Yale this afternoon. Outsiders also will take great interest in the game. and everyone about Cambridge hopes Harvard will win. Ninety-four has all the fall felt too sure that the game was in their hands, but we suspect that the Yale team will not prove so easy to control as has been imagined. It will not do for the freshman team to rely upon anything but the hardest and most thoughtful kind of work. For the past four years the freshman game has been won by Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/29/1890 | See Source »

...come in from all sides that men can get no tickets. It is very unfortunate, but we do not see that there is not enough room at Hampden Park. We fail to see any lack of judgment on the part of the Harvard management; for, certainly no one would suspect that more than about eighteen hundred tickets would be sold in Cambridge. It was necessary to have tickets for sale at New York, at Boston, and at Springfield, for our graduates must be recognized; Cambridge was allowed a fair proportion. There are still a number of white tickets for sale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/20/1890 | See Source »

Some one, we suspect a member of the graduate department, has written a Harvard letter to one of our contemporaries from the far West which we feel it almost beneath us to notice. This person has undertaken to deal sarcastically with our manner of living and with the financial management of the University, and has made it appear that Harvard is intolerable in the extreme. He pictures a state of affairs which would be ridiculous in any college and which is far from what we enjoy. We do not want graduates of other colleges to come to Harvard who cannot...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/5/1890 | See Source »

...many of the men that I have spoken to about athletics have expressed themselves as rather opposed to a dual league that I suspect the presence of a large class who believe in no league at all. I am so impressed by their arguments (which I think have not appeared in print) that I venture to ask a few lines of your space to recapitulate them in. Without any agreement or any red tape we have a league de facto. Whatever contests we undertake now will be simply matters of sport. The colleges will be (or ought to be) gentlemenly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications. | 2/24/1890 | See Source »

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