Word: greenly
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...score of 28-20, Massachusetts Agricultural College 23-20, and the University of Maine 36-23. The second defeat of the year followed at Hanover. The Crimson was leading at half time due to the consistent foul shooting of Captain Gordon and field goal shooting of Lowenthal, but the Green recovered in the second half and soon regained a lead which it held...
Dartmouth seized the lead at the opening of the game and easily kept it for the first half, which ended with the score 16-9 in the Hanoverians favor. With the opening of the second half the Crimson game speeded up, while the Green failed to score, and in the last few minutes of play the University was leading by a small margin. It seemed as if the game was over but Dartmouth tied the score at the last moment with a goal from the field and the period ended with the score tied...
...Crimson lost to the Hanoverians by the score of 49-37 on February 10, but the Green will be seriously handicapped tonight by the loss of Captain Cullen, who made 35 of the 49 points scored against the University last time, and by the loss of Sailor, regular guard. Captain Cullen is in the hospital, and neither he nor Sailor will make the trip to Cambridge...
Since the Crimson-Green Clash at Hanover Dartmouth has been three times defeated, by Cornell, Princeton and Yale, the scores being respectively 31-33, 15-22 and 22-26. The Cornell-Dartmouth game featured an extra five-minute period. In games with Columbia and Pennsylvania, Dartmouth won by scores of 32-29 and 19-17. The opponents of the Green have pilled up a total of 127 points against her 119. On the other hand the University quintet has scored 160 points against its opponents' 127, but it too was defeated by Yale 36-28. This is the fourth basketball...
...real scene ever did look like a scene of the stage. That is true in greater or less degree whether the scene be a forest, waving like a set of green banners behind the proscenium, or a street in the Venetian ghetto of the Merchant of Venice, with every stick and stone and human being arranged with indefatigable precision by Belasco, king of realists. The spectator never can quite persuade himself that he is peeking through a chink in the fourth wall of the room, hiding behind a poison ivy vine in the woods, or bobbing about behind a wave...