Word: ending
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...fall competitions for positions on the business, photographic, news and editorial staffs of the CRIMSON will begin next week. Candidates for the business end will be called out first. They should report at the CRIMSON Building, 14 Plympton street, Monday evening, September 22, at 7.30 o'clock. Photographic candidates are to report at the CRIMSON Building Wednesday evening, September 24, at 7.30 o'clock, while those who intend to enter the news or editorial competitions should report Friday, September 26, at the same hour...
Tomorrow marks the beginning of the end for the Class of 1919. Commencement week, with its ceremonies and festivities, will write down more than six hundred new names on the long roll of Harvard Graduates. On Friday, the experienced college man will become the inexperienced man of the world. But he will carry with him the best possible training for all various kinds of success in after life. He will have had in addition to the mental training of his studies, the invaluable experience of learning how to conduct himself among his comrades, and how to meet new friends...
...seven of the eighteen games which it has played up to the present Yale series, it may yet win the championship of the "Big Three" by scoring victories, today and tomorrow. By winning two of the three contests with Princeton, the nine put itself in a position to end a previously mediocre season by victories over its two chief rivals...
...losing streak of five games was culminated on May 10, when air-night pitching by J. T. Murphy of Dartmouth shut out the University 9-0 in a game which was called on account of rain at the end of the sixth inning. The Crimson infield showed poor fielding and poor judgment, and the two Crimson pitchers were ineffective...
According to reports received today, the course for the races next Friday will probably either be shortened by 150 feet at the end or the start will be pushed forward the same distance. This is caused by the fact that the finish of the course as it stands at present would be a little below the railroad bridge on which the observation train is to run. The New York, New haven, and Hartford officials fear that, unless the course is changed, an accident might occur owing to the tendency of the onlookers in the train to lean...