Word: readings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Parkman, F., 5 1919 18 182 6 ft. 3 1/2 in. Batchelder, G. L., 6 1919 19 187 6 ft. Leighton, J. D., 7 1919 19 153 5 ft. 11 1/2 in. Emmet, R. S., Stroke 1919 18 155 5 ft. 10 in. Read, D. H., Coxswain...
...Freshmen who leave are: G. L. Batchelder, E. I. Brewer, C. Canfield, R. Cobb, R. S. Emmet, D. A. Freeman, Jr., C. Greenough, G. D. Leighton, J. F. Linder, Jr., E. L. Mitchell, W. R. Odell, F. Parkman, D. H. Read, C. R. Richards, A. Thorndike, Jr., and F. B. Whitman, Manager W. C. Hubbard and Assistant Manager A. F. Tribble will have charge of these...
Stroke, R. S. Emmett (captain); 7, G. D. Leighton; 6, G. L. Batchelder; 5, F. Parkman; 4, W. R. Odell, Jr.; 3, A. Thorndike, Jr.; 2, F. B. Whitman; bow, C. B. Richards; cox, D. H. Read...
Many articles have appeared during the past year revealing the shocking ignorance of college men concerning the progress of the great war. A recent issue of the Independent Magazine makes this statement: "We fear that they have been reading the war news, but have made no effort to understand it." Between the conflicting fires of an English official communication, a Berlin official report, and a French communique, it takes more than an intelligent person to read the news of a single engagement and understand which forces gained the advantage. After a series of attempts to untangle the contradictory statements...
...lamentable ignorance of this necessary minimum has been generally interpreted as indicating that our college students do not read the war news, and they have been scolded in many a chapel talk and editorial for neglect of the papers. To us, the results of this quiz seem to show that they are guilty of something far less excusable. We fear that they have been reading the war news, but have made no effort to understand it. Such diligence and complete absorption in the required studies as to prevent a student from looking at a daily, or even a weekly, would...