Word: pooled
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Eighty entries have been made in the pool tournament which opens in the Union today. This is an exceedingly large number, for there were only 24 entries last year; and a spirited tournament is expected. The drawings for the first round and the individual handicaps are posted on the notice board in the Union. All matches of the first round must be played off by Thursday night. Drawings for the succeeding rounds will be made later. A cup has been provided for the winner of the tournament...
Hereafter the price of pool and billiards in the Union will be 25 cents an hour for two players instead of 50 cents an hour as heretofore. This price is much lower than at other pool rooms, and should increase the popularity of the Union as a meeting place to a great extent...
...handicap pool and billiard tournament, free to all members of the Union, will begin on Monday, February 24. In case a sufficient number of men enter the matches, a cap will be given to the winner of each event. All men wishing to enter the tournament must sign the blue-book in the office of the Union by Saturday, February 22. P. Eaton '14 and V. Shaw-Kennedy '16 have been appointed as a committee to encourage pool and billiard playing at the Union and to make arrangements for the tournaments which the Governing Board has decided to inaugurate...
...University swimming team was defeated in the dual meet with Yale Saturday evening at the Carnegie pool, New Haven, by the score of 48 to 5. No records were broken, although the events were all very fast...
...most modern compositions of D'Indy or some one of his sort, wrathfully departed from Sanders Theatre with the comment. "I did not come to Sanders Theatre to hear a reproduction of the noises of the street," this same music may be as pellucid as the pool of a mountain stream. All this, however, gives the Victorian little help in his present task. All of his loves--very respectable indeed, but old-fashioned--Scott, Dickens Thankeray, the great Jane, Fielding, Chaucer, Goldsmith, Byron, Wordsworth, Shakespere, and the people of the Bible, have trained and perhaps limited him to expect definiteness...