Word: showings
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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After the very first play in the Maine game Saturday afternoon, the crowd of eight or ten thousand spectators knew what to expect. The score at the end was 34 to 0, and shows clearly that the University team had things its own way. What the score fails to show, however, is that the game had all the ear-marks of the opening game of a season, from fumbling to a complete lack of snap in almost all of the play. What was seen clearest of all was that the 1913 Harvard team needs the services of an accurate punter...
...encouraging warrants us in reiterating this warning. In the same breath, however, we wish to say, as we did Thursday, that we believe that the team will win our highest confidence. We are certain that it will do so if Harvard men will unite from the beginning to show the players that they have supporters behind them who are ready to grant that confidence as soon as it has been earned. In other words, the success of the team will depend on the players and the men in the stands alike, the former working to be worthy of support...
...announced yesterday afternoon by the board of the Harvard Law Review, their fall elections show fourteen new men chosen, five being Harvard men. The elections are as follows: Albert Moses Cristy 3L., of Providence, R. I., Brown University 1909; George Knowles Gardner 3L., of Worcester, Harvard 1912; Harold Funk Goodrich 3L., of Anoka, Minn., Carleton College 1911; Herman Ellis Riddell, of Atlanta, Ga., University of Georgia 1911; and Sherman Woodward 3L., of Cambridge, Harvard 1911. From the second year class: Montgomery Boynton Angell, of Rochester, N. Y., Princeton 1911; Julius Huseman Amberg, of Grand Rapids, Mich., Colgate University 1912; Chauncey...
...every single Harvard man to show that he has confidence in the football team, but that he also recognizes the fact that it will have something besides plain sailing. We have dared to take this apparently skeptical stand, not merely to give the time-honored warning against over-confidence, but to see if we cannot unite team and College in a desperate attempt to make 1913 see Yale at last beaten in the Stadium...
Cornell was also victorious yesterday, defeating Ursinus by the small margin of 4 to 0. The game was very hard fought, and the Cornell eleven failed to show the speed and power hoped for by her supporters. On the other hand Ursinus showed entirely unexpected strength...