Word: lost
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...those who sat through the game in the Stadium last Saturday and saw the Eli eleven outplay and outfight our Freshmen, the result of the Informal vs. Newport Naval Reserves game came as a pleasant tonic to drown out their sorrows. The Informals lost, 14--0, but they put up a game which places them in the football Hall of Fame. With the possible exception of the Navy Yard team here in Boston, the Newport squad is the best in the country. With a line made up of men like Schlacter of Syracuse, and Callahan and Black of Yale...
...United States citizens formed a French aviation unit. Their toil and lives were offered to France, while people here rejoiced at our aloofness. They volunteered, as Americans, to serve the nation which for them meant Justice. These men might have joined the Foreign Legion, but they would have lost the distinctiveness of nationality. They might have mingled with French units, but they preferred to remain the sons of their own country. Love of adventure was not so much the incentive as a desire to show the world that the United States was not as apathetic as it seemed. Such...
...their first contest of the season held at Soldiers Field, the 1921 soccer team lost to Worcester Academy by the score of 3 to 1 yesterday afternoon. The Worcester team showed the benefit of its greater experience and larger amount of practice at all occasions, but the Freshmen played gamely and managed to keep the struggle almost even. The main fault of the 1921 eleven was lack of teamwork due to the short time the men have been practicing together. C. E. Masters '21, who was elected captain of the team on Tuesday, was the individual star for the Freshmen...
...articles. The latter are in some respects the most interesting contributions to the number. They echo many a dispute about verslibre. Mr. LaFarge attacks, Mr. Jayne defends, the new form. Mr. Jayne's essay is very thoughtful but we can imagine becoming quite as absorbed in "Paradise Lost" as in "Christable." Mr. LaFarge is very worth reading on the other side, but has, at times, the rather irritating superiority of the classicist. The unsigned opening contribution to the number gives us three opinions of war in the abstract, of which the first would seem the justest, though the author obviously...
...wing" (side-slipped) and then went into a nose drive. It struck the ground in this attitude. Two possible reasons for the accident are improper manipulation of controls, (using too much rudder) or illness. Bill may have become dizzy due to the quick turns of the machine and have lost entire control of his machine...