Word: raced
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Today the last practice will be held in Cambridge before the Princeton race on April 20, as the crews leave for Princeton tomorrow. Another race will be held today over the regular course, and all three crews will be pushed to their utmost...
...Another race over the two-mile course on the Charles River Basin constituted the practice for the first three University crews yesterday afternoon. University A again led the other two crews by a full length, while University B and C finished second and third respectively...
...well as to graduates. Philosophy 21 hf., Advanced Logic, with the Elements of Logical Symbolism, will be open only to graduates. Philosophy 23 hf., Modern Theories of Knowledge, will be omitted. Philosophy 26 hf., Philosophy of Aristotle, will be given. Psychology 7b hf., Genetic Psychology--Mental evolution in the race, phylogenesis, will be given. Two new courses in the department of psychology will be 12 hf., Psycho-physiology of Vision, and 24, Research in Psychophysiological Optics, both given by Dr. Troland. Social Ethics 15 hf., Recent Theories of Social Reform, will be a new half-course given the first half...
...America Passes By" a missionary's daughter and a young man, thrown together in Tokio where they see scarcely any of their own race, have become lovers. When the play begins they are visiting friends of the young man, a newly-married couple in Chicago. Here they find their relation to each other rapidly and fatally changing. To the quiet, religious young girl Chicago is a brutal nightmare; to the coarser-grained young man it is gloriously American, "the voice of the great old century we live in." To her his friends, their host and hostess, are vulgar and almost...
...stamp have not always been available and with the recourse to professional coaches it has often become necessary for the captain to shoulder responsibilities which improperly burden him and in some cases have greatly diminished his value as an oarsman. The captain-elect is until the night of the race with Yale simply an oarsman, without experience in judging men or styles of rowing or of any particular executive ability. That his election should qualify him three months later not only to assume the responsibility of the University rowing, coaching and selection of men but also the burden of directing...