Word: ails
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...been on the U. S. C. team that played California at Los Angeles last week, more people might have gone to see the game. As it was, there were 75,000, biggest crowd of the week. Even without Mohler, U. S. C. had a team which contained four Ail-American prospects: Captain and Left Tackle Raymond C. ("Tay") Brown, who makes a specialty of blocking punts; Right Tackle Ernie Smith, who has a bald head, huge paws and a talent for place-kicks; Ray Sparling, left-end, and at the other end of the line Ford Palmer who caught...
Amos Alonzo Stagg, Yale's first Ail-American end, went back to New Haven with his 41st Chicago team, which had started its season by beating Monmouth 41 to O. A prodigious skimming pass, Zimmer to Sahlin, from midfield to the goal line, gave Chicago its second-period touchdown, gave Yale, held scoreless by Bates the week before, its second tie for the season...
...Before the Hawaiian could read it, he was shouldered put of the way by Capt. Ward Wortman, naval guardian for the defendants during the Kahahawai trial. Mrs. Massie slipped past, fled to her stateroom, slammed the door. Capt. Wortman and process server wrangled bitterly outside. On deck blew the ail-ashore bugle. Mookini got off; Mrs Massie stayed...
...threw a 40-yd. pass to a point 4 yd. from the Dartmouth goal line. Harvard's Hageman and Dartmouth's Morton both jumped for the ball. Hageman caught it. Wood kicked the goal that gave Harvard the game, 7 to 6. Hugh Rhea, Nebraska's Ail-American tackle, received a letter signed "Heifer Bovine" offering him "big money" to let Iowa's halfback Hickman through the line for a touchdown. Hugh Rhea snorted indignantly. A 62-yd. march in the third quarter gave Nebraska a touchdown and the game, 7 to o. Intersectional
...since exposed as a "diploma mill.") Dr. Brinkley built a radio station. KFKB, broadcast jazz music interrupted by lectures on rejuvenation. Soon he had transformed the lectures into a clinic, prescribing medicine by radio to patients whom he had never seen but who had written to him describing their ail ments. The prescriptions were identified by code numbers; patients were told where to purchase the medicines. Kansas drug gists, who had suffered because many Kansas physicians filled their own prescriptions, soon found that Dr. Brinkley's prescriptions paid the rent. His Milford Drug Co. made up the prescriptions...