Word: shows
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...will finish at the Longwood bridge. The members of the winning crew will be awarded their club insignia, which will consist of a large "N" or "W" with "U. B. C." in small letters. Coach Wray and Captain Richardson will follow the crews in the launch, and men who show up well under the strain of racing conditions will be considered for the University squad next spring. Last year, 10 men were taken up to the University squad as the result of similar races, and these included members of both winning and losing crews. Four crews, two from each boathouse...
...members of the team are very inexperienced, while Yale has several of last year's men on her team. However, Harvard won an easy victory over Technology in fairly good time while Princeton defeated Yale almost as easily in only average time. The men who are expected to show up well are M. S. Crosby '08, J. R. Coolidge '10, R. E. Dole '10 and C. Lanier '10, of Harvard, and M. B. Vilas '08, A. M. Haskell '10, and R. A. Spitzer '09 of Yale...
...mile course in the basin, starting at the Union boathouse and finishing at the Longwood bridge. The members of the winning crew will, as in former years, be awarded their club insignia. In addition, the races will be closely watched by Coach Wray and Captain Richardson, and men who show up well will be taken up to the University squad next spring...
There is no mystery whatever connected with my withdrawing from the squad. Neither is it in any way due to the possibility that I "was not given a fair show." On the other hand, during all the time I participated in the work on Soldiers Field, I was treated with uniform courtesy and consideration by the coaches, the trainer and the management. I was given every opportunity to make good. After my participation in the Bowdoin game I was assigned to the University locker room and the training table--a distinction which I will remember with pleasure...
...will deny that the object of mass meetings is to encourage a team and to show its members that the University is behind it, and this object is decidedly a good one. If this is granted as the object, why not hold our mass meetings in the Stadium during practice, thus bringing it forcibly before the members of the team that the College is with them. Every fellow who was on last year's squad will never forget that great show of spirit in the Stadium on the last day of practice last year, when about 800 men turned...