Word: streams
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...from the second boat to fill the vacancies left by the absence of Captain Reynolds and C. E. Schall '16. L. Curtis '14, who has been rowing in the first, went back to 7 in B. The second eight had a short race with Union Boat Club up stream for half a mile, winning by about 1-2 a length. Following is the order in which the two crews rowed...
Practice for the first two University crews yesterday afternoon consisted of a long row down-stream, the boats not coming in until after 6 o'clock. Two changes have been made in the order of Crew A since the make-up announced earlier in the week. Morgan has replaced Parson at 4 and Murray has replaced Curtis at 3. In the second eight Curtis went in at 7 in place of Meyer who moved to 3. Parson is rowing at 6 in place of H. S. Middendorf who went to 4. Following is the order in which the boats...
...Saltonstall has replaced Murray at bow on crew A, Murray going to bow on crew B. The coxswains are still rowing in the same order as last week. Practice yesterday consisted of a long row for all the boats. Both crew A and crew B went down-stream from Newell Boat House to the Dam and back while crew C rowed up-stream to the Arsenal. The revised order of the crews is as follows...
...crews had a busy day yesterday despite the disagreeable weather conditions. The University and second boats rowed to the dam and back, the choppy water in the Basin affording them good practice while the third and Freshman crews went up-stream. Meyer is now rowing at seven in the second eight, in place of Curtis, who is sick...
...which will never be entirely settled; but on one side there stands the argument, far outweighing the cry against it as the end of Harvard individualism, that "By being brought at once into the compact body of the class they (the Freshmen) can be placed in a large stream of college life flowing in a larger channel than any smaller group they meet today." And then there is the matter of graduating in three or three and a half years, In addition to President Lowell's observations, one other argument, to sentiment, may be advanced--the pleasure and value...