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...Brush Stadium in this city and the Yale Bowl at New Haven at the same time, there was no complaint of diminished attendance at either. The crowds were enormous, and both games were inspiring, Yale won. After four successive and deplorable defeats, with not even a touchdown to brag about, Yale beat the confident Harvard team by a score of 6 to 3, upset all the betting calculations, and restored one of the universities' glories. Harvard can stand it, and everybody will be glad to have Yale back in the running...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Football Games. | 11/27/1916 | See Source »

...brag little, to show well, to crow gently when in luck; to own up, to pay up and shut up when beaten--these are the virtues of a sporting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD VERSUS YALE. | 11/20/1909 | See Source »

...Harvard increases the number of its constituents from the west, whatever the percents may be, it will eventually surpass Yale. From the analogy of history this result is not only possible but likely: so that the surprising discoveries of the Harvard papers do not furnish Yale so much to brag about after...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 1/23/1890 | See Source »

...Gosling's [the would-be 'popular man'] private opinion that he ought not to drink, and also that he does not like the taste of liquor; but if he hears that Swellington [the real 'popular man'] has been 'jolly drunk,' he will straightway get miserably drunk, and will brag about it for the rest of the year." If this had appeared in the Herald, no one would have been surprised, for it corresponds with the pictures of college life which appear from time to time in the public prints; but to find such a statement in a college paper...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GOSLING AND SWELLINGTON. | 5/2/1879 | See Source »

...person in college corresponding to the imaginary "Gosling," - a phenomenon whose real existence one is inclined to question, - he will never become popular by pursuing the policy suggested by this social critic. The man who will make a fool of himself because "Swellington" does, and will then "brag about it for the rest of the year," cannot be familiar with the ways and means of social preferment...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GOSLING AND SWELLINGTON. | 5/2/1879 | See Source »

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