Word: scored
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...scrimmage with the informals yesterday, the 1921 seven won only by the score of 3 to 1, although the defeated lineup contained neither R. E. Gross '19 nor A. H. Bright '19, two of the most effective forwards, nor J. Stubbs, the mainstay of the defence. The good showing of the upper-class men was due largely to the steady goal tending of W. J. Louderback '20, who proved himself their most valuable player. E. L. Bigelow '21 and R. W. Buntin '21 were the most aggressive factors for the winners...
...colleges and universities that started the movement for the union were New England institutions and fully a score of our New England institutions are now identified with it. First, there is a home for college men passing through Paris or on furlough there; second, a headquarters for the bureaus of the individual colleges, many of which have representatives on the ground; third, it is a clearing house for information as to casualties, etc. On the first night that the Union opened in October the representatives of 30 colleges took rooms there. In the first three weeks men had registered from...
...Team A scored five goals to their opponents' none. W. W. Rice '18, who was a powerful offensive factor throughout, scored twice, as did Gross, who took part in a scrimmage for the first time. E. Cabot '20, the fastest and most effective forward of last year's Freshman seven, who has been out with an injury, started yesterday at left centre and was responsible for the fifth goal. The first team's superiority was evident from start to finish, and only very able defensive playing by players of Team B, notably W. W. Hoffmann '19 and H. F. Gibbs...
...last hockey practice before the vacation was marked by a fast scrimmage between the informal and Freshman teams, in which no score was made by either side. The play was very fast in spite of the sticky condition of the Arena surface...
...Three-score pages and ten of the December Advocate are abroad in our midst. True, it opens with a reprint of "France," by John Macy '99, and for the sake of that "France" we could endure much. If you call a dog the Harvard Advocate, undergraduates will be inclined to love it; but unless the standards of the present Advocate not only improve but suffer a sea-change, even the faithful will fall off from...