Word: ices
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...known of the Technology seven which will meet the University hockey team at the Arena this evening at 8.15 o'clock. Not only is it the first game for the M. I. T. team but it will be only the second time the squad has had practice on ice. The new rink on Technology Field was successfully flooded for the first time yesterday afternoon so that up till then all the practice had been on land...
...other hand, the University has only once been defeated by M. I. T. and should have an easy time continuing this record tomorrow evening. The squad has been handicapped by poor ice surfaces in the Arena during the past week but in spite of this there has been a steady improvement in the style of play. Each individual has been learning to efface himself for the good of the team so that spectacular plays have been infrequent in the practices and the men are working more and more as a unit...
...Centre street, and Philip Rutledge, of 8 Chatham street, both of Cambridge. Lathrop and McKay were walking along the parkway near the Cambridge Boat Club about 5 o'clock in the afternoon when they saw a crowd collected near where the two boys had gone through the ice. Lathrop immediately threw of his coat and plunged into the water, and with the assistance of McKay, pulled them out and carried them ashore. Neither of the boys suffered from the effects of their icy plunge...
Especially poor ice slowed up yesterday's hockey practice, making it hard for the men to keep their feet. A half hour of passing and shooting was followed by a practice game between the first and second teams in which the regulars scored twice and shut out the substitutes. G. Townsend '17 and G. A. Percy '18 were the two scorers. The former has been playing right wing since the game with the Boston Hockey Club just before the vacation and seems to be the most likely man for the final choice for that position...
...general work of the team was slipshod, and though this was in part due to the condition of the ice, it was not wholly so. Frequently the puck would shoot out of a general scrimmage with no one following it and with no particular purpose. There was also a great deal of slashing stick-work, and though on the whole the men passed fairly well, a great many passes were wide or too hard or forward...