Word: interested
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...college daily has become a necessity, not only for the three-quarters of the students who take a lively interest in the different sides of college life, but also for the professors and instructors, who make its columns the medium for their announcements. Its first function is to give the news. No consideration of advertising should encroach on the news. The chief effort of the editors should be to collect as much real news as possible and to present it in the most compact and orderly fashion. This seems a truism; but anyone who has read the CRIMSON for many...
...Sophomore year. One, two, three, or even four editors may be taken from each competition, according as they have proved their worth to the satisfaction of the managing editor. At first the work is very general and consists of picking up about the College any items of peculiar interest. Any candidate who shows that he is in earnest easily survives this stage, and is given every possible assistance by conferences with the editors. Soon the more promising news gatherers are given simple assignments, if they have proved their willingness to work and their ability to write intelligently. Later the news...
...clock last evening 801 undergraduates had already signed. The petition will remain in he Crimson office today, where every man who has not already done so should sign in the interest of the cause...
Leiter Cup baseball is to be resumed. This is a welcome announcement at a time when interest in intercollegiate athletics is becoming more extended than ever before. The scrub series was missed last year and it was felt, at the time that every effort must be made to restore it another year. Soldiers Field is still too crowded in the spring months to afford opportunity for all the scrub games that could be desire; nevertheless it is expected that there will be room for everyone who enters to take part in at least one game...
...however, convinced that the present proposal does not meet the situation, because without some form of intercollegiate athletics to interest the undergraduates, the latter would look for other outside interests, which, we believe, would be far worse than the evils caused by intercollegiate contests. But we believe that any permanent remedy lies rather in the direction of a development of a public opinion among the undergraduates which will discountenance the evils and make them impossible...