Word: one
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Under the direction of Mr. Alfred Winsor '02, former University hockey star and coach, and one of the leading national authorities on hockey, and Mr. Harold W. Read, chairman of the Boston Athletic Association Hockey Committee, plans are now well under way for the opening season of the new Ice Pavilion in the Technology Block. A local league, composed of the University, Dartmouth, an organization of former Y.D. men, the Boston Hockey Club and possibly the Crescent Hockey Club, has been organized and a schedule of weekly games among these teams is being made...
...One of the most important objects of compulsory physical training is to interest Freshmen in some form of outdoor sport. Exercise in a gymnasium is good, but is does not fill the place of a competitive game played in the open air. Mere development of the muscles during one year is not what is wanted; a real interest must be aroused so that men will regard their exercise not as an unpleasant task required of them, but as a real pleasure which they will continue throughout their college course...
...only flaw in the system, as we see it, is that nearly one-third of the men are taking indoor exercise. If all Freshmen were required to partake in outdoor sports during the autumn and spring months, and during the winter months only were permitted the alternative of gymnasium work, then the dangers of their confining themselves entirely to the gymnasium would be obviated...
...analysis of the scoring which has been done up to this time on the football field shows that the University has rolled up 179 points through 26 touchdowns, 20 goals from touchdowns and one field goal, while opponents of the Crimson have not scored. In all thirteen men amassed the total number of points for the University, of whom E. L. Casey Occ. stands first with 30 points to his credit. R. Horween Occ. follows with 26 points, made by three touchdowns, seven goals from touchdowns, and the only field goal made this year, succeeded by A. D. Hamilton...
...slightest justification for overconfidence," said Coach James Knox '93, concerning today's battle with the Tigers. Coach Knox is better fitted to make such an assertion than other members of the coaching staff, since he has followed the development of the Princeton eleven closely and has attended almost every one of its games. "Such overconfidence as they have at the present time," he continued, "probably owes its origin from the comparison of the Harvard and Princeton scores this season, particularly the victories of Colgate and West Virginia over the Tigers...