Word: outlooks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...spite of the black outlook at the beginning of the season, the performance of the track team has been far from unsatisfactory. The results of the first meet participated in, the B. A. A. games, were on the surface disappointing, but an examination of the races show that things were not as bad as they seem. In both the two-mile and one-mile University relay races, the half-lap leads which the opposing teams had at the finish were due to one runner on each team, who lost distance through inability to take the corners properly. This fault...
...outlook for the spring season this year is more promising than it has been for some time past. E. O. Gourdin '21, R. D. Howard '23, Vinton Chapin '23 and C. H. Wansket '23 make a strong quartet of 100-yard sprinters, while Gourdin and Howard, with J. E. Kennedy '23, are the most likely men in the 220. There are no particular stars in the 440, but Kennedy, Richard Chute '22, Bayard Wharton '22, J. W. Quinn '23 and A. H. Gordon '23 are all dependable runners. In the half-mile there are Wharton, J. A. McCarthy...
...return of Head Coach Guy Nickals on Monday night has given rowing at Yale an impetus. Looking over the various crews on Tuesday, Coach Nickals expressed himself as very well satisfied with the outlook, and in view of the advanced development of his men and of the open winter, determined to send the eights from the machines at the gymnasium to the Adee boathouse on the harbor the next day. The return of Coach Nickals has aroused enthusiasm at New Haven, where Yale is looking forward to a repetition of Nickals' wins over the University...
With the Yale president, the freshman dean, the head masters of Connecticut preparatory schools and the Governor of Connecticut all Harvard men, according to the present outlook, Yale alumni are in a somewhat daned condition mentally and are just taking an account of the remnants of their native stock. One of the questions they are asking is how it will seem if the president of Yale waves a Harvard football flag at the future football games. The Governor of Connecticut and other Harvard alumni waved crimson banners at the last match. --New York Evening...
Viewed from the opposite angle, however, Yale's outlook is not so blue. Good material is sure to be developed from a squad of 200 men by a coach of Nickall's ability; there are men at Yale like G. S. Rockefeller, who because sickness prevented their rowing in the final races last year, are not counted among the veterans, and yet have had the benefit of long coaching and experience, and finally a crew fighting against odds has always the advantage of a crew that is over-confident...