Word: went
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Yesterday afternoon changes were made in all three University crews. D. A. Newhall '06, who reported Tuesday, went into the University boat at number 2. Last spring he rowed 4 in the Yale race. Tappan, who had been at 2 on the University crew, and who rowed there last year, went to the same position on the second. Kellogg who had been at 2 in the second boat did not row yesterday. Gill who had been rowing number 3 in the four-oar, was changed to 7 on the University second crew, Corbett was moved from...
...duty of the University Faculty to do away with the game. Mr. Fairchild said that he used to think that the game of football was clean, but after examining his photographs he noticed a lot of foul play. While these photographs were on the screen the lecturer went on to point out two peculiar evils, the difficulty of detecting brutality, and the helplessness of men in the scrimmage to protect themselves from attacks that would not be tolerated in a street fight. To illustrate the advantage gained by committing fouls, views were shown of holding in football and of crowding...
About 70 men reported yesterday afternoon for the first class rowing of the year. Only one Senior crew went on the river, but two eights and a four-oar from 1907, and three eights from 1908 went out. The arrangements made yesterday are only temporary, as men will be shifted constantly in the process of choosing the crews to row in the class races...
...crew, which rowed yesterday for the first time this year. In the second boat Fish was put in at six in place of Richards, who was moved to four. Kellogg was changed from four to two, while G. Bacon was tried in the four oar. The University crew went down stream to the Magazine street beach, where smooth water was found...
Four Freshman crews went out on the river yesterday afternoon for the first time this season. They rowed by fours and sixes in short stretches from the University boathouse as far as the Water-town bridge and back, coached by Wray. Three other crews rowed on the machines in the University boathouse as usual under the supervision of Coaches Vail and Stephenson. The men who went out on the water rowed well together and in very good form considering the time of year. Their recovery was generally weak and a tendency to keep their blades too long on the feather...