Word: tigers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Princeton stretched the Crimson heart to its limit. The defense, magnificent throughout the year, held the Tiger squad to only one tally. Again and again, as it appeared the Tiger tide might sweep past the tiny nine points the offense had amassed, the defense came up with a play to plug up the dam. A goal-line stand, a key interception by Tommy Wynne, and a come from behind chase down tackle by Mike Georges were the highlights. But the Princeton game gave the pessimists something to talk about "George Lalich can't pass," was the new phrase...
Princeton finished in the same predicament as Harvard. The Tigers were one of the top teams in District II with a 14-7 record, but five of those losses came against the leading teams in the EIBL competition. Again because of the NCAA ruling. Tom Petroff. Rider baseball coach and head of the District II selection committee, said he was forced to invite independents N.Y.U. and Seton Hall, both teams that Princeton beat, rather than the stronger Tiger team...
...NCAA does not remove the ruling from the books, it could mean the end of the Eastern League. Last week, members of the Princeton baseball team asked their Athletic Department to withdraw the Tiger nine from the EIBL. The players reasoned that Princeton could play the exact same schedule as an independent and be selected by the District II playoff committee...
...while celebrating the splendor of the past; of a heart at tack; in Montagnana, Italy. "I belonged," he once wrote, "to the prewar era, a proud citizen of the great free world of 1914, in which comity prevailed." Not for him the modern age, in which "the sabre-toothed tiger and the ant are our paragons, and the butterfly is condemned for its wings, which are uneconomic." In his brilliantly styled poems, essays, novels (Before the Bombardment, 1926; The Man Who Lost Himself, 1929; Miracle on Sinai, 1933) and his monumental five-volume autobiography (Left Hand, Right Hand...
After scoring four goals and one assist against Princeton, Crimson attackman John Ince is now tied with Tiger sophomore Pete Johnsen for the Ivy scoring lead with 20 points. Ince, a junior who won the league scoring title last year with 23 points, has collected nine goals and 11 assists. Brown's Bob Anthony is third with 16 points...