Word: bowle
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Alfred University went home, happy to have met with Yale, to have used into the Bowl, and to have been thrown into the limelight. She made some money, too. Yale, on the other hand, theoretically benefitted from the "breather." Her players were preserved from further injury; her full strength marshalled to repel the furious attack of the Princeton Tigers...
...provided his team with what seemed a safe margin, Gnome Booth retired to the sidelines, watched Dartmouth creep up. In the last half he returned to the lineup but by this time McCall and Morton were making a turncoat of the jinx that has bothered Dartmouth in previous Yale Bowl games. Morton had made a 94-yd. runback of a Yale kickoff. McCall caught a pass intended for Booth, scuttled 60 yd. for a touchdown. Three minutes before the game ended the score which had been Yale 33, Dartmouth 10 had become Yale 33, Dartmouth 30. Standing on Yale...
Cadet Richard Brinsley Sheridan, whose neck was broken making a tackle in the Yale Bowl last Saturday, died yesterday afternoon at 5 o'clock in spite of all efforts to save...
Enthusiasm and spirit are getting so worn out by misuse around Yale that it is criminal to bring them up. But is is more criminal to make a bunch of athletic captains and managers do calesthenic exercises to amuse a bunch of mummies in the Bowl...
...more stringent coaching, less stringent entrance examinations. The fact that Yale backs no longer need to know their latin conjugations and declensions did not help them much against Georgia last week. Never before beaten three times in a row by any team except Harvard, Yale came out of its Bowl at New Haven beaten for the third time, by a onesided score? 26 to 7. Midget Albie Booth helped make one touchdown in the third quarter, nearly scored another with a 74-yd. run just before the first half ended. But before Midget Booth came on the field, Georgia...