Word: rushing
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...scrimmage was hard fought and characterized by a snap and dash which bodes ill for the Princeton seven. The forwards followed the puck closely and shot hard and accurately, Willetts and Claflin offered a stonewall defence to Team B's attack, and each time broke up the opposing forwards' rush. Hopkins tallied the only score of the practice when he drove the puck into the net after Smart had passed it out directly in front of the goal...
While an undergraduate in the University, Mr. Trafford was the most prominent member of his class, being class president throughout the four years and First Marshal on Class Day. He was a member of the Phi Beta Kappa, rowed on the University crew, and played on the rush-line of the University football team. In 1890, as a student in the Law School, at that time eligible for athletics, Mr. Trafford played on the first Harvard eleven to defeat Yale in the modern game of football...
...spectators but lacking in speed until the latter part, Harvard defeated the Massachusetts Agricultural College in the Arena last evening by the score of 4 to 3. In the last two minutes of the overtime period, with the score 3 to 2 in favor of Amherst, by a brilliant rush down the rink and a pass from Hopkins, Smart shot the goal that tied the score. A minute later Wanamaker got the puck and breaking through the defense managed to shoot it by Buttrick for a win. Amherst played a good game of hockey. Buttrick at goal made a number...
...glorification of Brickley at the expense of his colleagues is justified because of the method of scoring. He did what the others could have done. He won the game by his own skill, and not merely as the man who chanced to carry the ball on the final rush...
...whose purpose it is to preserve Harvard traditions and records, has planned a short gathering in the Delta by Memorial Hall tomorrow morning to honor the memory of the man who established Harvard University. It is quite fitting that all loyal Harvard men should stop a moment in their rush to do brief homage to him who made possible all that Harvard has meant to them...