Word: felted
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...believe it to be a fact that the men who have taken part in the contests of past years have been seriously injured thereby. Nevertheless the strain is a very severe one, greater than in any other of our College contests, and many men have, I know, felt the effects of it for a very considerable period...
...crews, two from the University Boat House and two from the Weld. Mr. E. C. Storrow '89 was appointed head coach, and the style adopted was a compromise between that taught by Mr. Lebmann and that which had been in vogne during the few years preceding him. It was felt this year that something more permanent than the class crew system should be adopted, so the Newell Boat Club was formed and given part of the University Boat House...
...sends to you its deepest sympathy in the sorrow which has come to you and the Class by the loss of your son, Francis. His unvarying good humor, his bright disposition and kindheartedness endeared him to the friends he made among us, and made his loss the more deeply felt. He was sincere and constant in his friendship, and left behind him memories of goodness, kindness and unselfishness. For the Class, EDMUND J. D. COXE. WILLIAM N. TAYLOR. THOMAS STOKES. VICTOR C. MATHER RICHARD DERBY. ARCHIBALD G. MONKS. WILLIAM C. CLARK...
Only within recent years has an interest been felt either by English or American university men in international athletic contests. The growing familiarity of each with the other has therefore revealed wide differences not only in the technical features of various events, but in the prevailing spirit of sportsmanship as well. "Granted, the common love of out-of-door sports, the two countries differ in almost every particular. . . . Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Pennsylvania, Cornell, merely to speak the names in a single breath raises an atmosphere of jealous and aggressive rivalry. . . . Oxford, Cambridge -- there is an immediate suggestion of fifteenth century...
...Class of 1904, we wish to extend to you our sincerest sympathy in the loss you have sustained in the death of your grandson, Hamilton. By his ability and his kindly nature, he had won the regard and respect of all who knew him, and his loss is deeply felt by the whole class. For the Class, LOUIS GRILK, JAMES A. BURGESS. RALPH SANGER. ALBERT V. DEROODE. E. V. R. THAYER, JR. WALTER E. SACHS...