Word: times
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...development of the crew was naturally very rapid. There was not the trouble-some problem of finding a stroke, and the eight was apparently seated at the outset of the season in the exact order in which it would row Yale, almost four months from then. Up to the time of the Columbia race on April 17, the boat was moving very fast. The crew was remarkably well together for so early in the season, and Sargent still had his ability to row a high stroke and keep it for a long distance, or to raise or lower...
...regain his form. In the first few days at New London the crew improved materially and seemed to be emerging from its slump, but the work was still not what it should be. On Friday, June 18, the sudden, though not entirely unexpected, change came. Sargent, in the time trial on the day before, had been late in his stroke for the last mile and a half of the course, and seemed to have lost all the good points so characteristic of his work last year. He was removed from stroke and his place was taken by R. W. Cutler...
...freshman eights and university fours. Although there was much bad weather on the harbor at New Haven, the crew improved steadily and consistently, until it was as efficient as the average fast eight which Coach Kennedy regularly turns out. At New London the crew has rowed two fast time trials and continued to improve. The crew this year seems to be different from the Yale crews of other years. The men seem to row shorter, and the long, hard catch and finish are not so pronounced as in former years. The crew is very well together, and a well-balanced...
...University baseball team shall play its best game. If it does, victory seems assured. That it will, the experience of the past two years leaves little room to doubt, while this year's team in particular has demonstrated its ability to play its best game at the right time. The two Princeton games are sufficient illustration of that...
...present time sufficient money has not been subscribed to the 1909 class fund to meet the early demands that will be made upon it. It is essential that the first instalment be sent to the treasurer before Class Day. If the pledge card has not yet been sent in it is desirable that this be done at once even though actual payment cannot be made at the same time. J. M. GROTON, Treasurer...