Word: camp
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...detail the plan calls for camps, lasting four or five weeks in June and July, located if possible at the former training centers in nine army corps areas, which like Camp Devens are at the present moment lying almost deserted. Men under twenty are especially desired but ex-Plattsburgers will insist that anybody be eligible so long as he is enthusiastic. Perhaps 50,000 men will be taught the fundamentals of military training by reserve officers, who are thus offered an opportunity to polish up their knowledge by actual practice...
...team, who came to Harvard from a school which has no track team, and West more Willcox, of the class of 1917, and present holder of the Harvard 440-yard record, who never ran until his Freshman year in Harvard. Some of the latter class are Jay Camp '15, who was not good enough for the Exeter track team, but plugged away at Harvard and in his Senior year tied for first place in the high jump in the Intercollegiate meet. Robert St.B. Boyd '14 was supposed to be too small to make a team at school, but he came...
...most popular forms of employment during the college-year were: tutor, clerk, proctor, monitor, census-taker and ticket-taker. During the, summer the most popular vocations were tutoring, and serving as tutor companion, camp counsellor or clerk...
...census-taker, choreman and ticket taker. There were also many men who occupied their spare hours in employment as carpenters, salesmen, librarians, ushers, waiters, stenographers or watchmen. During the summer the leading employments for men who were earning their way through college were tutoring and serving as tutor companion, camp counsellor or clerk...
...fair to succeed to "Chick" Harley's niche in Middle Western College Football. It will be interesting to see what Walter Eckersall has to say about Gipp's work during the rest of the season. The former quarterback now reporting for the Chicago press has more influence on Walter Camp's selections than any other scribe in Western Conference circles...