Word: winning
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...another column of the CRIMSON are published the names of the men who are going south on the track team. These men compose only a small part of those who are being counted on to win points for the University this spring, to say nothing of the Freshmen, who are not included at all. Therefore it has been arranged that Coach Quinn stay in Cambridge during vacation from Wednesday through Saturday and coach these men every afternoon, and it is hoped and expected that both University and Freshman track and field candidates will take advantage of this chance for extra...
...each game won as two points, each game tied as one, and each lost as none, the standing in the intercollegiate league is as follows: Haverford, 7; Columbia, 6; Harvard, 4; Yale, 4; Pennsylvania, 4; Cornell, 1. Haverford, Columbia and Pennsylvania have already completed their schedules, so that by winning the next two games, Harvard would win the league championship...
...being out, while others, and the majority in fact, do not appear just because of sheer laziness, or because they have some insignificant engagement which could be perfectly well put off. Without a good start how are we ever going to get together a team which will win from Princeton on the 4th of November? That is an unusually early date for a big game and that is reason in itself for making spring practice doubly important. We must have more men. It's up to every man to drive every bit of football material in College to the field...
...object. The CRIMSON may fairly be criticised more than almost any undergraduate organization because its possibilities of good and evil are great. Let it not be forgotten, however, that it takes longer hours and more persistent hard work to get elected to its board than to win almost any other distinction in the College. Let it not be forgotten that although its standards may not be as high as they should, yet the standard is faithfully maintained on a not amateurish basis. The CRIMSON indeed gladly welcomes friendly criticism from editors and outsiders alike. But from a wholesale avalanche...
...itself. This has not before been possible owing to the proximity in the past of the two and four-mile races. With the strain of the long course at New London only a month away it has been considered impracticable to adopt temporarily the sustained high stroke necessary to win from Cornell over a two-mile course. But with six weeks to prepare for Yale, the University crew can meet Cornell on even terms...