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...Freshman sextet caged one goal against the University players, leaving the score 1-0 at the end. Throughout the play was slow and rather disorganized, characterized by swoops up and down the whole length of the rink by each line in turn, which were disrupted by the defense before direct shots to the goals could be made. As nearly the entire squads of both sides got into the scrimmage concerted action was made more difficult. During the first few minutes A. H. Ladd '23, J. Larocque '23, and P. W. Butman '23 the forward line, carried the puck nearly...
...ability as a scholar. The applicant will meet with the adviser, who will assist him in planning his work, systematizing his habits of study, and aiding him in any way possible. The aim of he adviser is to point out better methods of study rather than to give out direct...
...both sides the work of the goaltenders did much to keep the score down as nearly every one of the tallies which penetrated the cages were pushed in from a scrimmage at the goal-tenders' feet, the first goal only, made by Murphy of Dartmouth, being shot from a direct drive down the ice. During the first half of the initial period no score was made, until Murphy received a pretty pass from Bower, eluded the defense and tucked away the first goal nine minutes and 15 seconds after the face-off. Thereafter the Crimson pulled itself together and carried...
...Colonel Roosevelt "average"? Not a bit. He is a real chip of the old block, combative, honest, direct--not to say blunt--like his father before him. His war record was first rate; his book is a good deal better than might be expected from an author of little literary experience. There is lots of the Roosevelt personality in the book, and lots of the First Division spirit. For some, and let us hope many readers, that should be sufficient recommendation...
Even more than the charges against the meeting do we resent the implication that the University authorities only sanctioned the meeting because they were ignorant of its character. This seems a direct insinuation that the Harvard administration is unwilling to let both sides of a difficult question be studied here. But Harvard is fortunate in not being administered by Prussian autocrats...