Word: testing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Slagle has been left out of the starting lineup for tomorrow but will doubly see service before the game is over. The Navy contest will be the first test to the newly charged line with Captain McMillan at guard and Barfell at center...
Both Yale and Princeton will be put to the test today, and there is about an even chance of their meeting defeat, Yale at the hands of Pennsylvania, Princeton through the efforts of the Navy. William and Mary will take on Randolph-Macon at Richmond, and the struggle promises to be close...
...have elapsed, and the exhilaration of Harvard followers at seeing their eleven pile up point after point has somewhat absted, reason dictates that the score of the game can hardly be taken as a criterior of the team's prowess. Middlebury was hardly represented by an eleven which could test the Crimson's power, nor did it possess the substitutes necessary to relieve the badly baltered line. Holy Cross, undefeated, is to be faced this Saturday, and promises to provide the first severe test...
...chairs and a baggage room, to Carrier Pigeon Planes not much bigger than dragonflies, rose from the Ford field at Dearborn, Mich., last week for a 1,900-mile trip. Edsel Ford flagged them away. He had put up a large silver trophy for the winner of this "Reliability Test." Planes were judged on the consistency of their performances. They buzzed steadily ahead, not trying for speed but just to see which could stick at it best. At Indianapolis they were met by rain, at Chicago by a cheering crowd. In Omaha Pilot "Casey" Jones wriggled between two other contestants...
...University football team, with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, resulting in an 18 to 6 victory for the Crimson; has brought forth an infinite amount of comment and speculation as to what may be expected from the 1925 eleven. The new Fisher-Daly system has been given its first test, and according to the general consensus of opinion, has revolutionized Harvard football, R. Keith Kane '22, captain of the 1921 team and one who has been in touch with University football since leaving college, has written especially for the Crimson, the following criticism of the new system as it was shown...