Word: done
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Distinctly the best work is done in the essays where undergraduate work usually is best. Mr. Whistlerr's plea for strict nonprofessionalism in amateur athletics stands out as the most noteworthy contribution to the magazine. The exposition is admirably clear and just, the illustrations are well chosen, and there is a maturity in the style which is most grateful to the reader. "The Joy of being a Freshman," by Mr. Murdock, is in humorous vein, and enjoys a real merit among pieces of its kind in making fun moderately and in having a vital subject. The writer has discovered...
...second team will disband this evening. It will have done its duty to Harvard, asking not even so slight a thing as recognition. It is the second team that learns Yale formations and lets itself be beaten all over the field to get the University into condition. It is the second team that supplants the dummy and charging machine and gets little more sympathy and thanks than these implements of early season training. It is the second team that is second to the University only is ability at football, that almost leads it in Harvard loyalty and in its purpose...
...militant supporter of equal suffrage. She deals with the facts which she has gathered by practical experiences. During the Progressive campaign here she assisted in speaking for Woman Suffrage, for which movement the Progressive party stands. At present she is speaking through the East on "What the Vote has done for Women in California...
...Haven, Conn., November 13, 1913.--Practice today for the first team men was very light, consisting mainly of signal practice and drill in kicking. The first team went through signal practice with the third team, no tackling being done. Guernsey and Pumpelly tried drop-kicking. The punting was done by Knowles and Guernsey, while Marting and Warren alternated at the kick-off. The gates were thrown open to the public...
Princeton opened its season against Rutgers, and the resulting score of 14 to 3 against a weak eleven showed that there was much to be done in the Tiger camp. The calibre of play was low, the men weak on the most fundamental points, and the team disorganized in action. Since that time, however, most rapid strides have been made. The three easy contests with Fordham, Bucknell and Syracuse following gave the team opportunity to study and eliminate weak points, to try out new line-ups and formations, and were of the greatest assistance to the coaches in every...