Word: trained
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...March 2 TIME before, because the railroad was tied up between here and the Coast. It was glaciation and snow. So we did not have any train for more than seven weeks. Usually we have a train here two or three times a week and get mail from the States once a week. Or every ten days anyway. During the tie-up we sometimes got letter-mail by Gillam Airways. We did not get 2nd class mail nor magazines. So please excuse us for not writing sooner...
Otherwise the Harvard seating is unchanged as the two Crimson outfits rest in their fraternity house residences tonight. The work is all over for the week, except for the races tomorrow night. The athletes arrived here about 8.30 this morning after a 16 hours' train ride. They went to breakfast while Edgar Denison rigged the boats and returned to the boathouse about 11 o'clock for the workout, which consisted of limbering up and racing starts. Another row was held late this afternoon, the shells being left in the shelter at the start of the course, there to stay until...
...however, there is little advantage, there being no leeward or windward positions. The water is brought for everyone, or the water is smooth for everyone. The only ones who really suffer from the wind are the spectators, that is, if the wind is accompanied by rain, for the observation train here is exposed to the elements...
With three days of strenuous practice behind them the first two boats of the University navy will embark for Ithaca today, leaving by the 4.30 o'clock train from the South Station. On Saturday they will engage in a quadruple regatta, meeting Cornell, Syracuse, and Technology, the latter for the second race of the season...
...special train which will carry seven of Harvard's sport teams, approximately 140 athletes, and other undergraduates making the trip this way, to New Haven on Saturday for matches with Yale, will leave the South Station at 8.25 A. M. that day. The train will arrive in New Haven at 12.10 and will leave New Haven for Boston at 6.10 P. M. Approximately 300 persons are expected to be on the train inasmuch as more than 50 reservations of graduates and undergraduates already have been made. Reservations on the train may be made by applying to Carroll F. Getchell, General...