Word: lost
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...culmination of the class football season will be reached today when the Seniors and Juniors clash at 3 o'clock to decide which team is to travel to Yale to meet the Eli class champions. The Seniors have won two games and lost none, while the Juniors have won two and lost one. The series may result in a deadlock if the Juniors win, while if the Seniors come through today they will be undisputed champions...
...winning its second game from the Sophomores the third year team brought its average closer to the record of the Seniors, who have won two games and lost none. The Juniors have now won two and lost one, while the Sophomores have failed to win any of their three games...
...hand, the more radical and "modern" type of young writer should not necessarily be deprived of an outlet for what may sometimes seem his hectic enough wares. It is possible that, as Mr. Edmonds suggests, the Hound and Born will die when those men now running the publication have lost interest in it If that should be the case it is to be hoped that another journal of similar nature will be born to take its place. The Advocate, if it pursues its present policy of a liberal conservatism, will ably care for the less volatile aspirants to literary fame...
Power Appliances. Electrical refrigeration commercializes a device which the British scientist Lord Kelvin built 30 years ago. With a pump he compressed gases; the gases lost heat. He permitted the gases to expand into a chamber; they absorbed heat from neighboring objects. Such objects naturally grew colder with the abstraction of their heat...
Next day Sport Writer Williams of the New York Evening Tele-grunt meditated gravely on teacups and the apparent discrepancies between opera and sports arena. Mr. Williams distinctly recalled a recent prizefight in which Michael McTigue lost the light-heavyweight championship to Thomas Loughran (TIME, Oct. 17), chiefly, according to Mr. Williams, because, Mr. McTigue waited until the last rest between rounds to "toss off" a teacup of something. He recalled Rube Wadell, baseball pitcher, who sat over his teacups all one night before his pitching masterpiece?a game against Detroit in which Ty Cobb, first man up, bunted safely...