Word: larger
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...been brought to the attention of the CRIMSON that it was in error in reporting a decrease in the enrolment of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The figures for 1915-16 were based on the registration for June of 1916, which was considerably larger than those of a year ago. In December, 1915, the enrolment of the school was 598 which has been increased to 605 this year, and the number of American colleges represented has risen from 156 to 161. The following table show the corrected figures, based on the present enrolment and that of December...
Actual training has begun among the oarsmen of the larger colleges, East and West. Official rowing is now going on at Princeton, Cornell, Columbia, Syracuse, Leland Stanford Jr., and California., and will start soon at Yale, Pennsylvania and the University. One of the great questions of the coming season is whether Syracuse will be invited to participate in the annual Poughkeepsie regatta and perhaps the greatest change in the situation since last year is the practical retirement of Charles E. Courtney as active coach at Cornell...
...receipts this loss has top be made up by loyal graduates. The advantage of an amateur coach is one in which the University is alone, for in most of the other colleges professionals take charge of their crews. In spite of this advantage, the University's rowing expenses were larger than those of Yale, Princeton and Pennsylvania last year. The figures for last spring follow: Rcpts. Expenses Loss Harvard, $6,567.37 $28,156.88 $21,689.51 Yale, 5,369.01 24,627.92 19,258.91 Princeton, 1,979.88 4,229.88 2,250.00 Penn. - 9,794.79 9,974.19 Totals...
...University leads but with 14 less than last year, having a total of 255. No other university has over 25 representatives. Dartmouth is second with 21 and California third with 20. Both of these figures are larger than those of the same universities last year, but in many other cases the number is much less...
...Princeton team outplayed their opponents in the first half. They outskated the Yale players and broke up the forward line every time they swept down the ice. Nearly all the playing in this half was in Yale's territory and a larger score was prevented only by the many excellent stops of York, the Yale goal guard. Hills of Princeton made the first goal 12 minutes after the start of the game and Armour of Yale made a lucky goal three minutes later...