Word: playing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...last game of the season the University soccer team will oppose the Haverford eleven on Soldiers Field at 2.30 o'clock today. This game marks the close of a fairly successful season, and also the end of virtually all of the fall sports. The team has played seven games, of which two have been won and two tied. In the first game of the season the inexperienced Andover players were over-whelmed, although they put up a game fight and kept the score to 3-1. The second game was a hard-won victory for a team of Chinese students...
Tonight in Sanders Theatre there is to be held a meeting that will be far from one of mourning, except for the part that the United States has been forced to play in all this mess. The purpose of the meeting is to crystallize public opinion in Cambridge, and to make the people who have been blocking the Treaty see that it is the will of the country that they forget their petty squabbles and peanut politics and come to an agreement that will bring the Treaty into operation as quickly as possible. On Monday, the Senate reconvenes...
...last half the Artillery forced the play throughout. Cousens and F. D. Huntington '12, former University football and hockey star, played brilliantly for the Artillery together rushing the ball from mid-field to the 3-yard line when Huntington scored the touchdown...
...second performance of "Primerose" will be given by the Cercle Francais in the Copley Theatre at 2 o'clock this afternoon. Tickets for this performance are on sale at Herrick's and the Co-operative Branch Store at $2, $1.50, $1, and 75 cents. "Primerose," the 34th annual play of the Cercle Francais, is by Gaston de Caillavet and Robert de Flers, and it to be given for the benefit of the American Committee on Devastated France...
This in itself, is fair enough. But we are faced, either by understandings between capital and labor which all to take into consideration the public for by capitalistic solidarity which interferes with the free play of competition. The result is that the public does not share in the benefits growing out of inventions...