Word: going
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...nineteen players who will go to Brooklyn are: G. S. Baldwin '21, E. L. Bigelow '21, A. B. Blair '21, R. H. Bond '19, F. K. Bullard '20, R. W. Emmons '20, L. B. Evans '20, W. B. Felton '19, W. B. Frothingham '21, F. H. Gammack '20, R. E. Cross '19, R. P. Hallowell '20, E. S. Hardell '21; N. H. Kerr '19, H. P. King '21, J. L. Knowles '19, W. W. McLeod '19, T. J. Meehan '21, K. W. Perkins '20, and T. R. Thayer '21, assistant manager...
...CRIMSON's ill-considered reply, there is a halfpenny worth of bread which should not be cast in vain upon the waters. The news writing in the CRIMSON seems to call for an improvement in style. The short, matter of fact sentences allow little room in which to go wrong, but they also make it impossible to be interesting. More color, more space, more frivolity, more careless handling of the powers that be--a premium in the competitions on sprightliness,--while revolutionary would give the CRIMSON more life. The proposed increase in the size of the page will give opportunity...
...number of years of experimentation with the "laissez faire" system of athletics has proved that only a few men benefit from active participation. It seems impossible to change the habits of men except by some form of compulsion. Those who go out for athletics during their Freshman year will generally continue the practice throughout their undergraduate lives, but those who do not are rarely if ever induced to do so by any measure short of compulsion. Hence, if some form of exercise is enforced upon Freshmen it is probable that they will continue the habit thus formed during the rest...
...prize to go to the best of the choruses is the large silver loving cup donated five years ago by a number of graduates. The cup is now in the possession of Smith Halls, having been won by them two years in succession...
...throughout the College year. The union of the two papers makes possible the fulfilment of the CRIMSON'S hopes with the aid of the Illustrated's editors, whose experience will be a valuable asset in issuing the new pictorial. The benefits will be mutual, for, though the Illustrated will go out of business as such, its place will be filled by the CRIMSON Supplement in which the former paper's staff will have a major interest; and the scheme enables the CRIMSON to take a great step forward, full of possibilities for the future...