Word: training
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Work has already been begun on the observation train which is run yearly at the Harvard-Yale regatta. It will consist of forty cars this year, handled by two locomotives. Each car will be made to seat eighty-four persons instead of seventy-two as formerly...
...Kodaks" which in this number follow the editorials are unusally bright. There are only three of them, but none falls flat and the second is really a very good story. "The Man in White and the Man in Black," the first story of the number is by Arthur C. Train '96. Like his former work this is excellent. Train's work is certainly above most the Advocate stories. It is rather an uncommon plot and is a well written and interesting story. "Chatterton, - A Tragedy" by Knoblanch, who has just been elected an editor of the Advocate, is a natural...
...varsity crew leave today for their training quarters at New London. The men will leave Harvard Square at one p.m., taking the two o'clock train on the Old Colony route. They will stop at the regular Harvard quarters, which are just opposite the start of the race, four miles up the river. Thirteen men will be taken to New London and the probable order in which they will row is as follows: Fennessy, stroke; Cummings, 7; Vail, Captain, 6; Fearing, 5; L. Davis, 4; Newell, 3; W. S. Johnson, 2; Burgess, bow; Thomas, Coxswain. Substitutes, Richardson, Blake, Miller...
...crew will leave for New London Saturday afternoon on the 2.30 train from the Providence station and will arrive in time to take a short row in the evening. Beside the eight men above mentioned. four substitutes will be taken. Blake '94, Eddy '95, Richardson '95, and Purdon...
Chapel services Friday morning will be made commemorative. The funeral will take place at his home on South Street, Medford, at 1.30 tomorrow. Train leaves Haymarket Square...