Word: trusting
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...that would certainly give him honors if he took six courses on the same subject. So that a man practically gets the same degree for eighteen hours work that another man gets for forty-two hours work. There is something wrong in this arrangement without a doubt, and we trust that in time some method will be devised to do away with the evil...
...well presented, and that it deserves the respectful attention of all. In view of the above facts no one of refinement or delicacy of feeling could have witnessed the rude and very ungentlemanly conduct of certain members of the section Friday without visiting upon it the severest condemnation. I trust that a little of that sense of right which is, presumably, directed against a rival eleven, will exert itself actively in discouraging a repetition of the present instance...
...matters. When the matter of dissolving the league as it now stands and forming two others is brought before the convention, Harvard will have a perfect right to vote as she sees fit. Our relations with Amherst and Dartmouth have always been of a most friendly nature, and we trust that they may continue so. But we cannot think that in a matter of this kind Harvard should yield the indisputable right which she possesses of voting in the convention as her interests dictate to motives of friendship...
...meeting is for the purpose of organizing and of ascertaining the number of candidates. In so large a class there ought not be any lack of material, and we hope '86 will make as good showing on the diamond as she bids fair to in other athletics, and trust if she is defeated by Yale it may not be for want of endeavor...
Quite a singular will has been made by the Rev. Dr. Mercer of Newport, R. I., recently deceased. After a number of small bequests the property, amounting to about $200,000, is left in trust for the payment of annuities to eleven persons, old and young. At their death one-third of the property is then to be given to the presidents of Yale and Harvard Universities and to the Smithsonian Institution, for the establishment of scholarships for poor students; another third has been left to the laboring poor of England and Italy. Harvard's third of a third...