Word: worked
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...prescribed course in gymnastics for freshmen at Yale will begin on Wednesday. The work will consist of class drills on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons from 2 to 2.45. An option is offered of attendance four times per week, during the day, each period to be thirty minutes long. Members of the class who are in training for any team or crew will be excused from attendance upon presentation of a written statement from the captain of the team for which the training is done. This exemption applies only during the period of actual training...
...defense, and, except for Metoxen's 40-yard run through Lawrence, they rarely failed to tackle the runner in plays directed at them. Campbell and Hallowell played fast football, and the latter was invaluable for his punting. Fumbling was the striking weakness in Harvard's game. Gierasch worked hard, but did not prove as brilliant a runner as was expected and his fumble was as costly as it was inexcusable. Ellis was the only back upon whom reliance could be placed at all times. His ground-gaining, especially on a new formation with Donald back of the line...
Baldwin was a member of the Zeta Psi and Hasty Pudding Clubs. He also belonged to several polo clubs, his most successful work being done with the Meadowbrook team of Hempstead, L. I. He ranked with Foxhall Keene and was one of the most brilliant players in the polo association...
...individual work, Gierasch did some of the best rushing of the practice. In the first half, after Warren had made a thirty yard run on an exchange of kicks to the twenty-yard line, Gierasch carried it across the goal line behind well-formed interference. In the second half he scored again, this time from the middle of the field. Fincke's work at quarter was a great improvement, and his work in the interference was as strong as usual. Campbell's playing was good. Burnett missed a goal from the forty-yard line, besides making some poor passes...
...have taken part in intercollegiate debates, including alternates, and the presidents of the four class clubs. The object of the new organization will be almost entirely executive. It purposes to look after the general interests of debating at Harvard, arrange and conduct the intercollegiate debates, and direct the work of the class clubs and interclass debating. The constitution of the society will go into effect after a majority of members in three out of the four class clubs have ratified...