Word: columnism
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...question of having a coach for the gymnastic team is brought to our attention by a communication printed in another column. It is a point well-urged and the CRIMSON feels justified in upholding the sentiment expressed. That the gymnastic team would be one of the successful minor sports under favorable conditions is evidenced by the comparatively large number of men who consistently support the team in spite of the handicaps under which it works. Gymnastics offers unexcelled opportunities for physical training, but to maintain a team any longer under conditions so unfavorable that it cannot do honor...
Battery candidates for the University baseball team whose names appear in the notice column are requested to report regularly to Coach Sexton and Captain Wingate in the Gymnasium. The daily work there is a part of regular spring practice, and the attendance of every man is required unless he has been previously excused...
...been invited to be present at this meeting and it is hoped that as many men as possible will attend in order that the University as a whole may understand the plan, especially as suggestions from students will be welcome, as is outlined in Professor Hollis' communication in another column of this issue...
...president of the Federation of Territorial Clubs has answered fully in another column the communication in yesterday's CRIMSON signed by Mr. J. F. Stambaugh, president of the Ohio State Club, who opposes in the name of his club the action taken by the Executive Committee of the Federation in allying the Federation with the Union. Whether or not the Ohio State Club, which has been in existence only a couple of weeks, should feel called upon to upset a plan endorsed by the officers of the Federation of which it is a member, and already enthusiastically adopted...
...print in another column an analysis of the athletic records of the graduates of private preparatory schools as compared with the physical achievements of men from public schools. Certainly one obvious conclusion may be drawn from the facts as stated, and this conclusion is further substantiated by statistics of strength tests compiled by Dr. D. A. Sargent of the Hemenway Gymnasium. It was in order to formulate some observations on the physical phase of education and to contrast it with the intellectual that Dr. Sargent has gathered this data, obtained from the examination of about 1,000 Freshmen...