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...crew has been developing rapidly of late, and the river Thames will offer the best of opportunities for further improvement. The Haines stroke will there be tried out for its first four-mile stretch, and it is with considerable confidence that the coaches await the result. The departure from the Wray system which failed so hopelessly last year is one which is sure to bring interesting results. What the time trials will show is something to be looked forward to with impatience. A time trial, though governed to a large degree by weather conditions, can yet yield valuable information...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CREWS SHIFT TO RED TOP QUARTERS THIS AFTERNOON | 6/5/1916 | See Source »

...necessarily mean either the subordination of the captain or a lessening of his influence, nor does it mean the institution of a system of coaching whereby the head coach is to rule, as a despot, roughshod over rowing traditions or over undergraduate ideas. To those who expect or await the establishment of such a dictator to govern Harvard rowing I express an opinion that they are doomed to disappointment. There has never been encouraged in any sport that sort of control; and I hope there never will be a time when the undergraduate is to work under a system which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: L. Withington for Crew Change. | 4/8/1916 | See Source »

...recent finds of papyri in Egypt and by the wonderful achievements of archaeological research. The recovery of certain works of Sappho, Sophocles, and Menander enables us to sketch more clearly periods and figures of literature that were somewhat obscure to our ancestors. Who knows what may yet await the student, perchance at Herculaneum, if he is far-sighted enough to prepare himself for future prospects by labor with the Classics that we have? The great archaeological conquests of the last fifty years, when used with caution, permit us to re-create more vividly than our forerunners the environment in which...

Author: By Professor C. R. post., | Title: OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE STUDENT OF CLASSICS | 3/9/1916 | See Source »

...this number fourteen of the brethren--all of the Class of 1916--present specimens of their wares. We presume that editors from coast to coast will eagerly seize upon this illustrated catalogue of Harvard's annual output. Poems? Sanger, Clark, Jopling, Denison, Leffingwell, Reniers, and Cutler await orders. Stories? Nelson, Courtney, Murdock and Crane, at your service. Convenient little page-fillers in prose? Apply to Amory, Boyden, and Lamont...

Author: By F. SCHENCK ., | Title: "Advocate is Doing its Job" | 2/26/1916 | See Source »

Plans have been approved by the Department of Geology, and await the final approval of the University Faculty, for another geological excursion to the mountains of Colorado. These plans would make it possible for students to take a five weeks' course, for which one-half credit will be given, or to remain eight weeks, and, on submitting a satisfactory written report on the field work, secure one full course credit...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GEOLOGICAL TRIP ORGANIZED | 12/20/1915 | See Source »

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