Word: winning
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Dartmouth and Yale hockey teams will meet in one of the most important games of the season at Dartmouth this afternoon. If the Dartmouth seven is victorious, it will have a clear hold on the intercollegiate title. On the other hand, if Yale should win, a three cornered tie would result between Dartmouth, Yale and Harvard. Although the Dartmouth team has done little work since the Harvard game, it is in good trim with the exception of Wanamaker. The latter is expected to play today, however...
...developed in the last two or three years that a meet such as the one proposed will fill a want among track enthusiasts. In support of this it is pointed out that in the last two years it has been noticeable that champions have failed to repeat their title winning feats in succeeding annual meets. A few years ago it was not uncommon for an athlete to capture first place in some event in which he specialized for two or even three years in succession. In direct contrast to this is the fact that not a single intercollegiate champion...
...miles I do not believe it would lessen the strain on the men as the pace would naturally be more severe over the shorter course and the results would be about the same. I feel very strongly in favor of retaining the four-mile race, as a crew to win must know how to row and cannot rely entirely on slugging. It is the very fact that it is a long grind which makes it so worth while and so appealing to those who delight in a test of endurance...
Smith Hall defeated Standish by 3 goals to 1 in the first game of the interdormitory series which was played in the Stadium yesterday afternoon. The Smith team deserved to win, for it clearly surpassed its opponents both in speed and in stick-work. Beale and Powell starred for Smith, while Folsom did the best playing for Standish...
...undergraduate the constant pressure for championship teams that is one of the results of alumni loyalty in this country. And (this want especially to emphasize) if the loliaty of college students in American ceases to express itself in an intense desire to see their college athletic team win, and consequently in giving the services to organization for athletic success it may probably cease as well to find expression in the singularly generous giving to the material upbuilding of the educational plants of this country and in the constant striving for perfection of educational facilities...