Word: equal
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...were called out the second day after College opened and worked steadily till October 30, the last day of the fall regatta. The first two University crews, crew A and crew B, were very nearly equal all during the season. The third and fourth crews were known as the first Eliot and Thayer crews, with the remainder, ten graded crews, divided into the Eliot and Thayer clubs. Under fairly strenuous training the men rounded into shape rapidly under the supervision of Coach Wray. Special attention was given to perfecting a slow, hard stroke, with particular emphasis on an easy recovery...
...this list of entries the exceptionally well-balanced team that is representing Cornell this fall easily stands out as the most likely candidate for the title. The Cornell team has shown conclusively that it has no equal in the country at present and it is conceded by its rivals that it is principally a question of the size of the margin by which the team will be victorious. Windnagle, Hoffmire, Potter, and Speiden are all men of remarkable ability and each has a good chance of being first man home...
...hoped that the voluntary contribution of such a sum by the undergraduates of the University will not pass unnoticed or unrewarded, but will prove the opening wedge that will eventually result in the construction of a new and modern gymnasium through equal loyalty on the part of the graduates...
...Western Exchange was established. The institutions concerned were Knox College at Galesburg, Illinois, Beloit College at Beloit, Wisconsin, Grinnell College, at Grinnell, Iowa, and Colorado College at Colorado Springs, Colorado. Carleton College at Northfield, Minnesota, which shared in the arrangement informally from the first, has now been admitted on equal footing with the original four. According to the agreement the University sends to these colleges annually for half a year a professor who divides his time among them, giving such regular instruction and public lectures as may be arranged; in return each college is entitled to send to Harvard each...
...general interest. Any inflammatory speeches or display of undue prejudice will be, therefore, out of order. In order to carry out the purpose of the meeting, the discussion among the undergraduates will be quite informal and will take place entirely from the floor, so that everyone will have an equal opportunity to put forth and defend his opinions. The different points of view will be explained by sympathizers of the various warring countries...