Word: went
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...smoothly running scoring machine was developed that swept by the local defense. The defense work of Willetts and Claflin was so good that Syracuse could do very little, in fact its only scores were the result of lucky stabs by Ringer, from free-for-all scrim- mages. Wanamaker, who went in for Clark in the second period, scored three goals, mainly as the result of clever passing and stickwork. Phillips distinguished himself by his speed and hard shooting...
...lights in the Yard dormitories and in a considerable portion of Cambridge east of the Yard went out early last evening because of the collapse of a street-corner light post on Harvard street just beyond the Union. Traffic was held up for about an hour, and the power turned off until the wire squad repaired the damage and removed the pole, which fell across the street...
...University hockey team went down to a 3 to 1 defeat before the B. A. A. seven in the first game of the season Saturday evening. The playing of both teams was decidedly listless; accurate passing, team-work and the other ear-marks of good hockey were not in evidence save at rare intervals. The whole team appeared rather over anxious and unsteady, men getting away frequently with good chances to shoot only to lose the puck by overskating it. Some of this weakness was probably due to the soft condition of the ice, which must have hampered the players...
...sentences from Mr. Stearns's first installment, but they indicate its tenor. He boasts of having been helped to his room in Weld by the Yard cop three times to his memory, leaving us to guess how many times he did not remember it, while "the elms went up like rockets to the stars." By his own standards he would thereby be removed from any sort of suspicion. But we, nevertheless, suspect that he is not a typical Harvard man and that his generalities on Harvard's man and that his generalities on Harvard's failures are imaginary word pictures...
...Exchange Professors from France and Germany at present in residence. That by Professor Baldensperger, deals with an obscure but in one sense remarkable figure, Joseph Kancrede, the first instructor in French in Harvard College. Kancrede seems to have held his position here from 1787 to 1800. Later he went to Philadelphia, and ultimately returned to France, where he died, in 1841. Professor Baldensperger has diligently collected the meagre records of Kancrede's activities, including various publications; and has thus made a notable and interesting contribution to the history of that department of the University of which he is himself...