Word: seen
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...forty years ago. Of course running shoes, board and cinder tracks, take-off boards for the broad-jump, poles for the pole-vault, and the system of coaching have all been improved and necessarily have a bearing upon these records. Yet, by merely glancing at them, it may be seen that even grammar school boys of today could compete with the University record holders of 1875. Moreover, these records run on such a poor average that it would be possible for any all-round track athlete to break every one of the records in a single afternoon...
...furnishing a resume of that occasion and of depicting the strongest contenders from the two universities in the approaching Intercollegiates. Thanks to its exchange service with the journals of other colleges, the Illustrated is able to publish photographs of the stars from Cornell, Pennsylvania, and Princeton who will be seen here tomorrow and Saturday. Supplementing these pictures is an interesting history of the Intercollegiates and an interview with "Pooch" Donovan. The editors deserve praise for their enterprise in securing views of the Senior Picnic, but five days having elapsed since that event. The remainder of the pictures are devoted...
...current issue of the illustrated contains a large number of excellent photographic reproductions, as artistic as the writer has seen in any contemporary college pictorial. The work being done in this field by the members of the photographic department compares very favorably with that of many professional camera...
Many organizations, such as the Cercle Francais, International Polity Club, Deutscher Verein, Dramatic Club, Speakers' Club, Cosmopolitan Club, and many others of a like nature, could center their activities in the Union under the proposed system. The unfortunate effects of the keen competition of these many societies are seen many times. For instance, on April 8, M. Leroux, the editor of the "Paris Matin" and one of the most brilliant men of France today, spoke at the Union. He was in America engaged on a special mission to President Wilson. On the same evening, Mayor Curley spoke in Emerson Hall...
...with labor. To comprehend the situation, to discriminate between the fair and preposterous demands of labor unions, future business men may obtain light on this subject by studying it in college. There are many college students who come from environments where the ideas are moulded by men who have seen organized labor grow into power, and who have always dealt with it as a menace or unwarranted interference with their liberties. Undergraduates are not rare who consider the labor problem very simple: labor simply has to be fought. This is not the general attitude; but a sympathetic insight into...