Word: pasted
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...future, if only the system be carried out courageously, little by little, to a higher degree of perfection, profiting by each year's experience. Several long strides in advance have been made. No permanent injuries have been received. The team plays better on the offensive than have most past Harvard teams. The defense has been unusually strong. In short it must be remembered that notwithstanding Saturday's failure, the old conditions were reversed. For the first time in years Yale's team, though a strong one, was thrown upon the defensive and was decidedly pleased with its success in avoiding...
...following men be at the boat house at 3.30: H. Adams, C. Brown, C. P. Adams, Thomson, J. H. Perkins, Biddle, Higginson, DuBois, Garrett, Coleman, J. F. Perkins, Heath, Byrd, Marvin, Blake, and all other men who have been rowing during the past week...
...many years past collections of relics from the different Indian tribes have been accumulating in the museum. A number of these were obtained a hundred years ago or more and are of great importance, as, owing to the changes in Indian customs they could not now be replaced. These, with a few exceptions, have never been on exhibition, and Professor Putnam has now intrusted their arrangement to Mr. C. C. Willoughby, acting assistant curator of the museum. In a short time the arrangement will be completed and the collection labelled...
...incomparably stronger than it had been represented, yet even with this unexpected force against them, Harvard's forwards should still have carried the preponderance in their favor. As it was, the line almost to a man played football hardly consistent with their ability, and not one man exceeded his past capabilities, a fact brought out in glaring contrast to the work of the Yale line. The Harvard team undoubtedly had underestimated Yale's defensive strength, and it is also probable that Yale considered Harvard's defensive stronger than it was. It was just this one factor that prevented Harvard from...
...teams are apparently so evenly matched that it is almost impossible from an impartial standpoint to pick with any exactness the winning eleven. The Yale and Harvrd coaching staffs have pursued methods radically opposite in the development of their teams this year. Harvard departed from the precedent established by past coachers, in that the general lines upon which the team was built up were so changed as to leave little semblance of past methods. Almost from the frist day of practice, Harvard has had a regular first eleven, and, with one or two exceptions, that first choice...