Word: elis
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Eli Student body is interested also by the question of dormitory facilities. The Alumni Weekly again calls attention editorially to the lack of dormitory accommodation both the college and in the Scientific School. By assigning to the freshmen the Vanderbit dormitories, a step has been taken this year which is highly commended. But because of inadequate housing facilities, 43 college seniors, five juniors, 37 sophomores and 12 freshmen are not living in dormitories with their classmates...
Yale was extremely lucky in defeating Colgate 7 to 3 in a game in which the Eli eleven was completely outplayed. Early in the game, West of Colgate put a goal from placement over the bar, and the Maroon team held this slight lead until the last quarter, when Legore caught a forward pass and crossed the goal line for the touchdown that won the game. This lone score came after the Colgate halfback, Hubbell, had been so hurried in his punting that he had been unable to kick the ball accurately, and it went outside on his 20-yard...
Aaron Solomon Aronson, Theodore Mayo Atkinson, Arthur Leslie Barber, Earl Robert Beaman, David Beaman, William Procter Bell, Eli Cohen, Mon Fah Chun, Merle Eugene Curti, William Allen Denker. Charles Estell Dickerson III, Paul Rice Doolin, Daniel Joseph Dug- gan, Walter Frederick Eastman, Robert Ephraim Eckstein, Jacob Fine, John Alexander George, Jr., Everett Frank Gordon, William James Hitchcock, William Collar Holbrook, Samuel Bertram Horovitz, Clinton McCarthy Jones, Carl Smith Joslyn. Benjamin Kelson, Moses Kopel, Ralph Henry Lasser, Stanley McClatchie, Arthur William Marget, George Warren Matthews, Arnold Howatt Murray, Thomas Lloyd Pierce, Gordon Sparrow Pinkham, Correl Delos Pinney, Jr., Albert Ogden Porter...
...victory of 36 to 14, Yale avenged itself for the defeat by Washington and Jefferson last year. The Eli eleven displayed a strong rush line and a well-balanced backfield. The star of the game as usual was Legore, who kicked long punts, intercepted forward passes and made his usual share of touchdowns. Both teams played an open game...
Although Carnegie and Holy Cross had teams that from reports of early practice, appeared formidable, they were easily whitewashed by Yale and Princeton on Saturday. Legore's phenomenal playing was the feature of the Eli attack, which consisted of straight playing throughout the contest, Driggs, with his exceptional punting and powerful line-plunging, was the star of the Princeton backfield, while the Tiger line gave an exceptional account of itself...