Word: faulted
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...University basketball team was defeated by Brown by a score of 22 to 12 in Providence last night. The chief fault of the University team was an utter lack of defensive work and failure to cover their opponents. At the end of the first half the score was 11 to 5 in favor of Brown. The summary: HARVARD. BROWN. Grant, r.f. l.g., Ingalls Henderson, Underwood, l.f. r.g., Ahrens Randall, c. c., Leland Gring, r.g. l.f., DeWolfe Swift, Stinchfield, l.g. r.f., Rackle...
Seventy-one men are now reporting daily for Freshman crew practice. They are working regularly on the machines, but little apparent progress has been made so far, the men showing lack of ability to master the slides, the chief fault being slowness on the recover. The practice will be continued through the mid-year period from 3.30 to 5.30 o'clock daily, and any new men weighing 155 pounds or over, who wish to try for the crew, may report at the above mentioned hours...
...length and an explanation of some strange conversations and unaccountable actions would save it from being classed with the other stories of the issue. "Senor Costa's Diplomacy" and "Henderson" suffer equally from want of originality and poor narration. "The Wild Duck" partakes of these characteristics and the added fault of being "poetry...
Though it III becomes the student body thoughtlessly to find fault with measures--least of all those of economy--which the authorities have seen fit to adopt, yet in this particular case the final word of remonstrance seems hardly to have been spoken. That the libraries in question are exceptionally convenient and valuable for a small, but perhaps not entirely negligible group of men who are doing graduate work must be perfectly plain to everybody. That these men, since they are few, scarcely fill the the libraries every evening, does not prove that the opportunity of working there at that...
...which is the highest possible praise. His work justifies his position as first end among football players of the day. That Metcalf made his long run around his end is due to the failure of the secondary defense and to unpenalized holding by Yale, rather than to any fault of his. Parkinson's playing at centre was aggressive and effective, but was shadowed by his lamentably poor passing. LeMoyne at guard, although a Freshman, played a game which would have done credit to an older and more experienced man, and in him the University has a guard who will prove...