Word: cleaned
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Doty played at point for Captain Willetts, Adams at right centre for Hopkins, and Wanamaker at left centre for Phillips, whose injured hand will keep him out of the game for several days. The play was fast but lacked exactness and team-work. There were few clean shots or well guaged passes. Both Wanamaker and Adams showed good form in their positions, however, and the University defence was strong against the individual play of the substitute forwards. The goals were shot by Adams for the University and Saltonstall for the substitutes...
...winning from the University seven in New York Saturday, 4 to 2, the Princeton hockey team evened up the series and made necessary a rubber game which will be played in New York next Saturday. The play in contrast to the last contest with Yale was remarkably fast and clean. At the end of the first half the score was two all, Harvard playing a wonderful defensive game against the fast Princeton attack as well as being exceedingly aggressive. In the second half however the forwards tired and the substitutes sent in lessened this aggressiveness and forced a defensive game...
...University wrestling team lost 4 out of 5 bouts to the Technology team at the Technology Gymnasium Saturday night. The 129-pound and heavyweight classes were won by clean falls. All the other bouts were won by decision, and were very even, yet uninteresting. Captain W. R. Tyler '14, the only Harvard man to win his bout, put up a very good fight, and several times almost won a fall over E. B. Goodell of Technology...
...only after thirty seven minutes and forty seconds of overtime play that Saltonstall, substituted for Hopkins, drove the puck by Winants and won from Princeton by the score of 2 to 1 what was probably one of the most desperately fought hockey games ever played in the Arena. Clean and hard-fought throughout by both teams, this contest which lasted as long as two ordinary ones, belonged to either team until the very last play. So evenly were the sevens matched that it was really a toss-up which would win and with the innumerable critical scrimmages continually going...
...will you use that outside life? What will your boy make of it? There are shrines of all kinds in college before which he may bow. Best, I think, is the one that's built to him of the straight clean back and limb, who bends to no social set, whose vision is unlimmed b y specious show but who 'plays the game' and that's the shrine that shall last...