Word: months
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...time. Coach Collyer says the boatings are for the purpose of getting several likely looking combinations used to each other and getting them rowing together. None will be chosen as the university crew until after the inlet breaks up and outdoor practice begins. That is at least a month...
Cushing and Worn, two of last year's university crew, have not yet come out, but are expected to report after the beginning of the second term next month. The same is true of Lund, a university oarsman of two years ago, who did not complete the season last fall...
...exception of Cornell, have a satisfactory four mile course at home, and the result has been the establishment of elaborate training quarters away from the atmosphere and routine of university life, where rowing is no longer a recreation for men engaged in college work, but where for nearly a month every year they live to row, supported by gate receipts from commercialized athletics, or by the generosity of opulent patrons. The size of the rowing budget is thus enormously and unnecessarily increased, and rowing itself suffers from being considered a drain on the athletic treasury, and the beneficiary of 'productive...
...that Harvard cannot allow propagandists to speak in College buildings because the University will then appear to be backing the speaker. But is this the case? Harvard has allowed Ian Hay to speak in Sanders. Nobody intimated that Harvard was, for that reason, pro-Ally. But when, the next month, Harvard excludes Mrs. Skeffington, the Boston Herald relates the incident on its front page with the statement that "it was generally understood among the students that the action of the College authorities was taken because of Mrs. Skeffington's supposed anti-British sentiments." There was also a foul blast from...
...last Phi Beta Kappa dinner of the month will be held in the Tower Dining Room of Memorial Hall tomorrow evening at 6 o'clock. Professor John A. Walz '95, of the Department of German, will speak on modern German literature...