Word: done
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Captain J. W. Overton, L. L. Levine and V. E. Walter have done good work for Yale this year and took first places in the recent run with Princeton. A. E. Krauss and E. M. Knox are two veterans of last year's team who are expected to show well against the University runners, as they are in good condition and have been doing consistent work...
...total of Mr. Whittlesey's argument is that we would have obtained our pledge from Germany a little sooner under Mr. Hughes, and that we will succeed in "gaining fair treatment from England for our mails and cargoes." Just how, he neglects to state, but since we have already done everything but use force, economic or military, the intimation is that Mr. Hughes will do that! What a cheerful prospect this coercion of England for those of us who believe the Allies are right, and that our differences over property rights can be settled after the war, if need...
...publicity competition will start officially on Monday when all candidates will report in Matthews 19 at 3 o'clock. But there is advance work to be done, and those wishing extra credit may report today in Matthews 19 at 11 o'clock...
...course, he has not heard of the appeals made by the President's representatives at a Third avenue beer-garden. Secondly he cites as points in Mr. Wilson's favor the Army Bill, which disappointed and disgusted Secretary Garrison, and the Naval Bill "which," he says, "has done more for the navy than decades of previous Republican legislation." Increase of the navy, by the way, is something that no Republican (or Democratic) administration would have considered right in times of general peace, but--and here is the difference--in critical times of war, no Republican administration would have dreamed...
...sequence to failure of the purely amateur system of coaching the Yale authorities suggest the abandonment of intercollegiate sport. Supposing this were done. Supposing also that Princeton and Harvard joined with Yale in their radical step? The effects would be rather far reaching. Primarily we would see immense amphitheaters representing an enormous investment--$500,000 in the case of the Yale Bowl--standing as valueless relics. We would see the abrupt cessation of the income, with the equally immediate collapse of various non-productive' sports to the support of which this annual increment has been devoted...