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Word: bulldogs (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Blue Bulldog and he's been biting at Johnnie Harvard's heels for nigh onto 60 years now, but there won't be a trace of senility in the Eli hound's growl when he rushes onto his home greensward to grapple with the Crimson this Saturday in the sixty-first clash of the ivied classic, which started in the same year that the "new dining-club at Memorial Hall" served its first lamb and mint jelly...

Author: By Mitchell I. Goodman, | Title: Odell Brings Blue to Best Season in Years | 11/17/1942 | See Source »

Although the Crimson has scored but once victory to Brown's four, Harvard's victory over Princeton followed a 32 to 13 rout of the Brown Bear at the hands of these same Tigers. But Brown's other defeat, a 27 to 0 whitewashing by the Yale Bulldog, was followed by a comeback last week when they snatched a 20 to 14 victory from Holy Cross...

Author: By Burrage Warner, | Title: Brown Points For Victory | 11/13/1942 | See Source »

Besides this, the Bulldog harriers are running on their home course, which is one of the most gruelling in the country...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Varsity Harriers Will Run in Big Three Contest Today | 10/30/1942 | See Source »

...what is more interesting from a local standpoint, is the Battle of the Big Three. Eli Yale, which recently announced a Yale Plan which provides for every man in college, has two more alumni than Harvard. The Bulldog graduates number 23, and there are 21 Cambridge-educated sailors. The Princeton Tiger will be somewhat out of the running if things come to a showdown. Ten men from Old Nassau are listed at the school. M.I.T. has 16 men in training...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: STUDENTS AT NAVAL SCHOOL CONTINUE COLLEGE RIVALRIES | 9/30/1942 | See Source »

Officers. After dinner officers are nominally free, though many work some evenings. They wander from the long, polished-floored, white-walled dining hall to the glassed-in porch furnished with comfortable wicker chairs and tables with magazines, and they read or write, play with a bulldog puppy named Winston Churchill or go out on the stone porch to play ping-pong with WAAFs. Some stroll out on the thick, ruglike lawn and bang croquet balls inexpertly through wickets, using golf terms because they do not know croquet nomenclature. Officers are flooded with local invitations. Many country Britons write, mentioning lovely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Army & Navy: YANKS IN ENGLAND | 7/27/1942 | See Source »

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