Word: enough
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...committee of the Boston Harvard Club has been busy devising schemes by which the members may obtain exercise and fresh air. Arrangements have been made for an outdoor run form the club house each, day at about 5 or 6 o'clock in the afternoon. It is hoped that enough may be interested to form an organization having a "Captain of the Run," who will arrange all details so that men may be sure of someone starting daily. Arrangements have also been made to from a number of hockey teams which shall play for the club championship. If enough...
...Yale game. Every vestige of over-confidence has been wiped out of the College during the last two weeks. Harvard is now going to show her spirit in a mass meeting and parade. The thought that the Stadium has never seen Yale defeated has galled us long enough. It is time that the prophecy of 1904's Ivy Orator was fulfilled and the Stadium Field made the graveyard of a Yale team. That is why every one of us has got to turn out to administer some more of the thrills that count...
...next thing that will be noticed is that when Yale has the ball it adopts a formation which is practically an entirely new development in modern football. Curiously enough, this has been little commented on, but none the less it is novel and the most striking things about the Yale offence. Ordinarily the scrimmage line of the team in possession of the ball is without material gaps between the players from end to end. The Minnesota shift, while seemingly an exception to this statement, is in fact not so, because when the men assume their final positions prior...
Guernsey's drop-kicking technique against Princeton was in every detail equal to that of Brickley, and his goal of 28 yards against Princeton had enough power in it to have scored at 40 yards. Guernsey also is a long punter. Against Princeton his average through-out the afternoon was 40 yards, and some of his kicks travelled 50 yards...
...Upon the whole, Harvard is slightly superior to Yale, but not enough to classify the outcome of their meeting to a certainly. While Yale does not possess an equal opportunity to win, the Blue does possess a good opportunity, and under the present rules of the game many a game has been won by an eleven with less. The tactical plan of Harvard and Yale against one another it would seem must be a system of plays intended to create an opportunity." P. H. DAVIS, Boston Post