Word: clashed
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Harvard and Princeton clash tonight at the St. Nicholas Rink in New York City in the first game of the Crimson-Tiger series. The fact that the University seven defeated Dartmouth 3 to 0 in comparatively easy fashion a week after the latter had taken a game from the Tigers, 6 to 3, makes the Crimson a slight favorite, although Princeton's practice, culminating in a brilliant 4 to 3 victory over Yale last Wednesday at New Haven shows that the New Jersey team has developed very fast. Princeton has played six games so far, winning from St. Paul...
Granting freedom to the Philippines, helping China stand on her own economic legs and an honorable solution of the immigration question, were cited as three steps the United States must soon take to avoid a clash with Japan, by Gardner L. Harding '10, at a largely-attended meeting of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society at the Hotel Westminster Saturday evening. The subject of his address was "Must We Fight Japan?" He said...
Yale plays Princeton today in the other match of the first day of the tournament. In the second round of the tournament tomorrow the University will play Yale, and Columbia will meet Princeton. The University team will meet Princeton and the Columbia and Yale teams will clash in the final round of the tournament on Saturday. The matches will start in the afternoon at 2 o'clock and continue until midnight if necessary on the first two days of the tournament, and the hours of play will be from 9 to 6 the last day. According to the usual custom...
...Juniors will uphold the affirmative side of the same question in opposition to the Freshmen in the second debate of the series in Sever 11 this evening at 8 o'clock. The winning teams in both debates will clash on the same question on December...
...number includes three pieces of verse, only one of which contains anything remotely resembling even lukewarm tar. Mr. Rickaby's sonnet about the clash and reconciliation of his Muse and his Love, though smooth enough, is cloyed with pale pink, saccharine sentiment. Mr. Nelson's "Early Frost" is skillful work on a mighty theme; but its figures, although effective hints in themselves, are too familiar to be easily coordinated into a single, sharp effect. Mr. Murray Sheehan's two sonnets on "Fate," however, bear more clearly the stamp of vitalizing human experience. One feels that Mr. Murray is saying something...