Word: tigers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...only return for their trouble. Why the magazine should have been compared to "Life" I cannot see. The CRIMSON might as well be compared with the Transcript. Moreover, if Mr. Code wishes to compare, why does he not place the Lampoon against the "Sour Owl", the "Orange Owl", the "Tiger" or some other less zoologically named paper of humorous character? As for Lampy's boast of being the father of "Life", I would like to call Mr. Code's attention to that quotation which has something to say about the child being father...
...spite of this latter result, however, there are several items to be taken into account while weighing the respective merits of the two teams. The Eli-Tiger clash was, in the first place, and extremely close affair, Yale barely snatching the decision at the close of two hotly-contested over-time periods. Then again the contest was staged in New Haven, which fact, in the case of two evenly balanced aggregations, is always of considerable importance. The coming match between the rival sextets, which will be the deciding issue, may prove an entirely different story...
Princeton's season has been even less impressive than has Yale's for out of seven games played to date only two have developed into Tiger victories with one tie and four defeats...
...defeats followed close upon each other after the New Haven disaster. Columbia nosed out the Tiger team on January 18 in two extra periods, 4-3, and on the 21st, the Orange and Black players were put into the discard by the superior team-work of the University sextet. Princeton possessed the greater brilliancy, but these individual flashes were of-set by the steady offensive power of the Crimson machine and the Tigers went back with the short end of a 3-0 score. The last game to date came on January 27 when Princeton again humbled Pennsylvania, this time...
...impressive as those of the University's other rivals, but which may be expected to give the Crimson oarsmen a stiff race. On May 6 the championship crews of the Navy and Princeton come to Cambridge for the annual triangular meet. The same day last year saw the Tiger and Annapolis eights fighting desperately through the final stretch of the Carnegie Lake course, with Princeton the final winner, and the University boat well in the real, and though weakened by a few graduations the personnel of three two Combinations will be essentially the same...