Word: periodicals
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...resulted in a general improvement in the work of the baseball candidates for the University and 1921 teams. Already some semblance of a nine is being developed by Coach Duffy, and although it has been impossible to select the best man for each position in so short a period, the members of the two aggregations have shown up in excellent style for so early a date...
...good cause to deprecate a policy which not only leaves a whole nation in the chaos of anarchy, but endangers the success of our arms. Yet, despite all this, there exists no reason for our press to pour abuse and call down hatred upon that people. For in what period of history has a single race been face to face, at one and the same time, with a great foreign war and a complete overthrow of all institutions? The Russian situation is indeed unfortunate, but it demands for its understanding, not the abuse of narrow-minded patriotism, but sympathy...
...request of the debating authorities at Yale, a period of only 17 days has been allowed the teams this year to prepare their cases for the final contests. Preparations at the University will begin immediately, therefore, and the final teams will be chosen before March 18. From the nine men who were left after the recent debating trials, one negative and one affirmative team of three men each, and three alternates will be picked. The negative team will debate against the Princeton affirmative in Sanders Theatre, while the University affirmative debates with Yale at New Haven...
This week two companies are drilling each morning from 7.30 to 8.30 in the Stadium and the cage. Each spends half an hour in executing the bayonet exercises under the guidance of Captain Leslabay and his assistants, and the other half of the period is employed for practice in handling the rifles when aiming. The present schedule of drill for the regiment is as follows...
...outlining the work for the coming season, emphasized the necessity of conducting the practice as rigidly as in former years, with faithful observance of training rules and absolute attendance at practice. He pointed out the fact that if crew work is to continue on a firm basis during the period of the war, it must be put on that basis in this, its trial year; that to do this all men must put their efforts into the practice as though normal conditions existed. He stated that no formal training rules had yet been laid down and that no training table...