Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...regard to this collection the CRIMSON prints below a communication from Dallas D. L. McGrew '03, of the Boston Journal. Mr. McGrew went to France to serve with the American Ambulance Corps last January, returning to this country in July. While there he was in charge of one of the ambulance squads. He is at present engaged in recruiting for the ambulance service and all those who wish to join should notify him at 202 Washington street, Boston...
...following extract taken from the New York Evening Post is particularly pertinent in regard to an evil which seems to be gaining firmer hold on the colleges. It discusses the growing evidence that colleges are willing to make professional athletes of schoolboys in order to induce them to play on their teams...
...team is quoted as bragging that the eleven cost him so many thousand dollars, the previous season, what is the inference? A definite, combined effort to end this situation on the part of seats of learning which value their own self-respect and bear at the same time some regard for the mental and moral status of boys whom they receive as students, would be attended by immediate results. An association of institutions solemnly joined in compact to end, with respect to themselves at least, the present situation as regards preparatory school football players, would be attended by salutatory results...
...hoped that this committee may have a meeting in the latter part of November. This means that there will be no further action taken with regard to the reinstatement of the five athletes who declared themselves ineligible a few weeks ago, before the Harvard game at least. The committee appointed for the above purpose is as follows: Robert N. Corwin '87, chairman; Fred W. Allen '00, representing crew; George W. Case '94, representing baseball; John Kilpatrick '11, representing track; John W. Field '11, representing football; George Parmly Day '97, treasurer of the Athletic Association...
...nature of various occupations, but also of their own special aptitudes. They flounder about from one study to another, immersed at the same time in a welter of distracting undergraduate activities, with no guiding purpose. On graduating some, merely following the line of least resistance, become teachers, without regard for the special qualifications needed for high success in that profession. Others drift into business positions, in which they are dissatisfied; and frequently they lose several years in continued drifting before they find a permanent calling...