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Word: nevers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

Harvard's answers to such questions have never been uncertain. But in other parallel cases her clarity of vision seems sometimes to be dimmed. The writer has watched with pain the attempts of the athletic authorities to send one or two teams forth into competition with other colleges without the skilled training which everywhere else is regarded as indispensable. Whether the argument is that the personnel is so good that the men can afford to depend wholly upon their innate fitness and subjective inspirations, or on the other hand that it is so bad as to make it extravagant...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 12/1/1909 | See Source »

...cannot be denied that the spirit of this rule is almost never complied with in football games, though the audible coaching of players is a rare occurrence. When every substitute who is sent into a game bears a message to the team, and when, as sometimes is the case, the only reason for a change of players is the opportunity for giving instructions to the quarterback, there is a very evident departure from the intent of the rule. Frequently, too, instructions are given as in baseball by the position of a coach or player on the bench. Given two teams...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COACHES ON THE SIDE-LINES. | 11/30/1909 | See Source »

...annual collection of clothing, magazines and text-books will be made under the auspices of the Phillips Brooks House during this week. The collectors appointed will not call at the rooms in the buildings assigned to them as in previous years, since under the old system many men were never found during the collecting period and the results were generally unsatisfactory. They will send to each man in the building, however, a printed card stating the purpose of the collection, asking his co-operation and stating the room in which the contributions may be left. On Saturday wagons will...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OLD CLOTHING COLLECTION | 11/29/1909 | See Source »

...Battery outplayed the Cadets and, had it not been for a fumble on their opponents' five-yard line, would probably have scored. During the entire game the Battery goal-line was never in danger, while the Cadets were kept continually on the defensive. Gutterson, Ware and Beebe played a strong game for the Cadets and it was chiefly due to the Battery's concentrated attack on these three men that the Cadets were able to prevent a score. For the Battery, Clark played the best game, doing some excellent kicking...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Battery and Cadets Played Tie Game | 11/26/1909 | See Source »

...nine times in each half, including onside kicks, and averaged 35 yards on each kick. Kilpatrick played a wonderful game at end. He was almost invariably the first man down under a punt, though Coy was out-punting his ends between ten and twenty yards on the average. Kilpatrick never failed to keep the runner inside of him, and his defence was of the best. Hobbs and Cooney were both very effective in the line, Hobbs blocking one of Minot's punts which resulted in the first score, Philbin, outside of one brilliant run of 40 yards after catching...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: YALE, 8; HARVARD, 0 | 11/22/1909 | See Source »

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