Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Undoubtedly it will require some experimenting to discover the best way of adjusting the Freshman athletic system to the needs and opportunities of the new dormitories. Dean Briggs, in his report as chairman of the Athletic Committee, analyzes the alternatives under four heads. There is first the possibility of the system which obtained in the 1914 football season, the "one-sided competition" which brought defeat at the hands of the Yale freshmen. The University Freshmen were at a disadvantage in having their team chosen from interdormitory teams without sufficient practice as a unit. Victory is, of course...
Crew practice at Cornell has been resumed for all candidates, both university and freshman, in the upper crew room of the armory at Ithaca. Until after the mid-year examinations the candidates will not be required to report at any specified time, but will row at least three times each week...
With the advice and approval of the Graduate Treasurer of Athletics, and of the Executive Committee of the Student Council, the Second Assistant Crew Managership competition will be extended. Only men who have had previous crew experience will be eligible for this competition. All candidates are to report at the H. A. A. this afternoon at 1.30 o'clock, when the plans will be outlined. Actual work will not start until February...
...Freshman crew manager competition will start directly after mid-years, on Monday, February 14, at which time all candidates are expected to report. The work about the boathouse, together with a certain amount of clerical work, will commence on that date and continue until some time in May, when a manager and assistant manager will be appointed. Both these men will be taken to Red Top with the crews when they go down for the final weeks of practice before the Yale regatta. The competition is open to all members of the class of 1919. Anyone wishing further information should...
...report of an eye witness is always interesting, and when the event is the European war, and the witness a trained journalist like Dallas D. L. McGrew '03, of the Boston Journal, the interest is multiplied tenfold. In the current number of the Illustrated, Mr. McGrew tells what the American Ambulance is doing and can do in its service on the French battle-front. His comment on the attitude of the Frenchmen to the United States is straight to the point. "France feels . . . . that she is fighting for the preservation of the principles of liberty and the rights...