Word: hockey
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Excluding House athletics for the time being, there were 24 Harvard teams which took part in active competition with other colleges. These 24 aggregations played 176 games during the winter months. (Really only 174 games were played, since in two sports--hockey and polo--the Harvard seconds met the Crimson Freshmen). Out of these 176 contests Harvard won 116, lost 58, and tied two, making an average of two games won out of every three played. That record, although not imposing, is at least indicative of a fairly successful competitive season...
...crews to do so (TIME, July 14). Two of the shells were given Kent by Lord Rothermere, famed Hearst of England. Because no hired coach is permitted at Kent, the coaching is all done by Kent's busy young teachers. White Cassock used to coach football, and until recently, hockey. (He is still a member of the Hockey Advisory Committee of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.) Raccoon-coated, he had to shuffle about on the ice; he has never learned to skate...
...captains of Harvard winter sports teams were elected yesterday as their respective teams assembled at Notman's to have their pictures taken. Charles Crehore Cunningham '32, of Milton, was named as leader of the 1932 hockey sextet while Benton Spangler Wood '32, of Honolulu, Hawaii, was selected by his teammates to head next year's swimming team...
Cunningham, who prepared for college at Milton, is one of the outstandind athletes of the Junior class, having won his letter in both football and hockey. He played at wing all this year on the Crimson six having been shifted there from defence at the beginning of the season. Last year he teamed up on the defence with Batchelder and at the close of the season was selected on a mythical All-American sextet. He also captained his Freshman hockey team...
Other promising candidates include: Benjamin Beale '34, who played third base three years on the Milton Academy team and starred on the Freshman football and hockey teams; B. C. Elkins '34, captain and shortstop of the St. Marks team: J. T. Summers '34 of Noble and Greenough, who also plays football and hockey; John Ware '34, who captained the Milton team in 1930; Nathaniel Ware '34, who played shortstop at Noble and Greenough; Edward Laughlin '34, captain of Williston Academy last season; E. P. Morse '34, first baseman for Proctor Academy; and L. C. Jackson '34, of Houston, Texas...