Word: one
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...greater interest. This year the Harvard-Yale game is to be a real championship contest between two teams that stand clearly above all the other teams of the year. As the two elevens are physically equal, the issue will depend on the more effective application of brain-work on one side or the other...
...There is one article in the November issue of the Harvard Advocate--out last Friday--that every Harvard man will want to read; to a few Harvard men it may occasion some twinges in the process. It is Mr. Lunt's survey of the "Past Year at the Union." Mr. Lunt '09 was president of the Union for 1908-09 and it is from this standpoint that he discusses with much seriousness and force the question--"Does the Union fulfill the purpose, for which it was built?" The answer is strictly in the affirmative. The tone of the article...
...clock, and a spread in Sanders Theatre from 11.15 to 1.15 o'clock on the day of the Yale game, November 20. The table d'hote dinner, open to ladies accompanied by members, will be served at the rate of 75 cents to members and one dollar to non-members. Free tickets to the spread in Sanders Theatre will be issued to all members not applying for seats in the Hall...
Yale and Princeton will meet in their annual football game at New Haven today. A test of the strength of the teams cannot be drawn from the comparative scores as no one team has played both universities. Yale has undoubtedly had the easier schedule, but has done justice to it by winning the seven games on the schedule with comparative ease and not being scored on once. Wesleyan and Holy Cross succeeded in holding Yale down to the lowest scores, being beaten 11 to 0 and 12 to 0 respectively. Princeton, out of eight games, has lost to Lafayette, tied...
...race started from the Yale athletic field and ran for one mile through fields, then for five miles over roads and a dirt causeway, and ended with an upgrade and one lap on the Yale field. As the men entered the fourth mile, P. R. Withington '12 was leading, followed by a group of six Yale men. Withington, however, collapsed before the end of the mile, and the race was entirely Yale...