Word: grossness
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...minute later, Chase carried the puck down center, passed to Hamlen, whose shot bent the goal post. Gross pounced on the rebound and distended the draperies for the deciding goal before Colebrook could...
...while Ramsey, the Prince ton mentor, was forced to the alternatives of playing with tired players or of using replacements inferior to his regulars So frequently did the Harvard lineup change that the distinction between "regular" and "substitute" was entirely dependent upon who happened to start the game. Chase, Gross, and Hamlen answered the bell for the opening session, but in the second and third stanzas, Scott, Harding, and Zarakov opened play...
HARVARD PRINCETON Hamlen, r.w. l.w., Pitman Chase, c. c., Harding Gross, l.w. r.d., Davis Coady, r.d. l.d., Wilkinson Pratt, l.d. r.d., Halloch Cumings, g. g., Colebrook...
...Crimson's chief advantage lies in their strong reserve material, the second string forwards of Harvard being only slightly less potent than Coach Bigelow's starters. There is little to chose between the Team A forwards, Chase, Gross, and Hamlen, and their relief's, Scott, Harding, and Zarakov...
...following were appointed to the Prom Committee: John Randolph Burke of Milton, Chairman; Cecil Irton Wylde of Boston and Leo Francis Daley of Andover, vice-chairmen; Clement Duane Coady of West Newton; Henry Wilder Foote of Boston; Walter Rockwell Gherardi of Chevy Chase, Md.; Courtlandt Sherrington Gross of West Newton; Sarrell Everett Gleason of Evanston, III.; Samuel Haydock Hallowell of Readville; Carl Gustave Ture Lundell of Dorchester; John Schuyler Malick of Cincinnati, O.; Robert Allen Pinkerton of New York City; John Livermore Prescott of Norwood; Howard Slade of Cambridge; and Henry Sewall Woodbridge of Brookline...