Word: warranting
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...Matthew Arnold mitt be inclined to say that Harvard is fast going over to the Philistines. How that may be we do not know, since Philistines or Barbarians in this country are hard to define, and it would be very presumptuous to use such terms without sufficient warrant. Surely Charles Francis Adams, Jr., is not a Barbarian...
...very little on the subject beyond what we have clipped from other papers, as we felt sure our readers would probably hear enough of the discussion. The appearance, however, of Prof. Hofmann's address at Berlin, and the two reports of the Philosophical faculty of that university seems to warrant extended comment. As our view of the pamphlet in question seems too long to be inserted in any one edition of the paper, we have decided to extend it through several issues. We hope the importance of the subject and the value of this latest contribution to the discussion will...
...short time, if contributions handed in warrant us, we expect to elect one or more editors from the freshman class. As yet, we have received but few contributions of sufficient merit to warrant publication. We feel sure that there are a number of men in the freshman class who can do good work if they will only make the effort. We hope that these men will come forward and show that the class has good material from which to draw. The vacancy caused by the withdrawal of '84 must to a large extent be filled by '87, in the case...
...members which appear yearly in the Index. If some of these societies would only show more activity in procuring for us lecturers of well known reputation and standing, we feel sure they would deserve and would receive the hearty support of the college. Success in the past should warrant renewed exertion in the future...
...Advocate, we notice an editorial commenting on the fact that this year the HERALD-CRIMSON has had no column devoted to a summary of news collected from the Boston papers. There were several reasons why this column was given up. It was not deemed of enough general interest to warrant the considerable expense, and at best it was but fragmentary and incomplete. Further, we did not and do not consider it to be within our province as a college daily. Nearly every man buys a paper from which to get the news of the day ; in it he finds nothing...