Word: presenters
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Dates: during 1910-1910
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...Progress of Mrs. Alexander" differs in three particulars from the plays that the Dramatic Club has acted hitherto. It is a light and satirical comedy of the present hour; it has its local interest and entertainment, since the longest and the most amusing of the three acts passes in a Boston drawing room at the meeting of a Boston club; and it has been written by a student of Radcliffe. It will be the first long comedy and the first play by a woman that the club has acted. It is, besides, a piece actually written by a student...
...assisted by a succession of visiting graduates through the season, the men being invited to coach along special lines, and their attendance being secured at that stage in the season's development when their especial work would be most effective. This practice has endured at Yale up to the present time, and has worked admirably, all things considered. The coaches who teach position-play come very early. The more valuable men, who can deal with the team as a unit, come about the middle of the season. The men who infuse spirit and fight into the playing (how such fellows...
...Haven, regardless of whether he had ever played football or gave any promise of playing it. At Harvard, on the other hand, the men are given equal chances of demonstrating what they know, or can readily learn, of football per se; and the tendency is unconsciously to favor the present performer or the one who shows ready aptitude to take instruction. In other words, Harvard sees the present player; Yale sees the future player...
Both Yale and Harvard are strong, and although the former developed late, there can be no doubt of its present power. Lack of experienced material at New Haven formed a serious handicap to rapid development, and Mr. Camp's absence deprived the team, during the early season, of his supervision, which has been in the past Yale's greatest football asset. By defeating Princeton, however, the eleven showed that it has finally discovered its formerly latent strength and that the winning team will have to use all its power and all its knowledge before time is called...
There were about 100 men present at the song meeting held in the New Lecture Hall last evening. Both the old and new songs were tried, and the following new ones were selected to be sung at the Yale game: "The Sun of Victory," words by R. C. Foster '11 and H. T. Pulsifer '11, music by F. R. Hancock '11; "Victory," words and music by R. G. Williams...