Word: accountants
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Harvard by four goals to none. About 150 Harvard students journeyed from Cambridge to New Haven to witness the contest, and were commented on as "the biggest crowd from Boston ever seen in New Haven." Mr. Parke H. Davis in his book on football gives a very interesting account of the game, of which a few excerpts are printed...
Immediately after Saturday's game, the CRIMSON will issue a special football extra. This will contain a detailed account of the game, scores of leading teams for the season, statistics, pictures of Captains Storer and Ketcham; a picture of a scrimmage in the first intercollegiate football contest in the United States--that between McGill and Harvard in 1874, a picture of the Yale "Bowl" as it will look when completed, and articles on it and the development of intercollegiate football...
...November number of the Harvard Engineering Journal is fully up to the high standard of excellence which has characterized this periodical in the past. Three leading articles treat subjects of widely varying character in such a manner as to be interesting to all. An account of the inspection trip made by the advanced students in Sanitary Engineering is particularly meritorious in that Mr. Rice not only presents an interesting picture of the plants visited, but in addition furnishes data on equipment, costs, and efficiency which can be obtained from no other source. Mr. Mandigo shows careful analysis of certain problems...
...history of Harvard football, and those of us who watched it known that Harvard was fortunate in winning at all. The Princeton team is one of the very strongest of the year--powerful, aggressive, and versatile--and discontented undergraduate who watched a scoreboard or read a newspaper account know not whereof they speak when they complain of the low score. The Harvard players deserve congratulations for mastering such remarkable opponents. The meagerness of the victory only demonstrates what the keenest critics have said from the beginning; namely, that the team's pathway to the championship has not an advance lining...
...injured men are gradually recovering. Hitchcock's ankle, which may keep him out of the fight until after the Princeton game is now the worst injury. Although Mahan will not be able to play tomorrow on account of his poisoned foot which still confines him in the infirmary, he should be back at his position early next week. O'Brien was dressed for practice yesterday, and may be able to play tomorrow if necessary. Improvement appears also among the substitutes. Elken, a substitute tackle, practiced for the first time in two weeks; R. Curtis, another tackle, was also out yesterday...