Word: ending
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...referee put the ball in play at twenty minutes of three, and in three and one half minutes Cumnock scored the first touchdown. At the end of the first half, the score stood, Harvard, 44; Technology, 0. In the last half, Technology played a stronger game and Harvard only scored twenty-six more points, making the score at the end of the hour-two half-hours were played-Harvard, 70; Technology, 0. The touchdowns were made as follows: V. Harding, 5; Cumnock, 2; G. Harding, 2, and Cranston, Trafford, Finley, Morse and Fitzhugh each one-total 14-from which Harding...
...team that will play Worcester has not yet been entirely chosen. But Captain Sears will play full back, Trafford and Finlay guards, Cranston centre and Cunnock left end...
...number of Harvard men, anxious to arouse a greater interest in foot ball among the preparatory schools in Boston and its vicinity and thus secure better candidates for the college team, have taken an important step toward this end. A committee consisting of J. H. Sears (chairman), A. P. Butler, F. C. Woodman, C. A. Porter, F. S. Fiske, and R. S. Hale (secretary) have donated a cup, to be called the Boston School football Challenge Cup. The conditions governing the cup provide that schools within fifteen miles of Boston, and such others as the committee may admit...
...best tacklers on the team. He promises to be a very strong player. Gill is an old hand and the best all round man on the team. He is a very fine tackler and has the faculty of always being where the ball is. Noyes, the left end though suffering from a sprained ankle for several days has been playing a strong game. It is possible that Morrison, '91, may take Rhodes place as tackler and Rhodes go in as left end rush...
...have endeavored to forget as much of it as possible. The contrast between the style of rowing of the Harvard and Yale crews in the race was most striking. The Yale crew carefully covered their oars at the beginning of the stroke and kept them covered to the end, maintaining a firm pressure throughout, the appearance of their oars in the water reminding the observer of the Harvard crew of 1885, but otherwise their work was far superior to that of Storrow's crew. The Harvard crew, in their body work, followed the principles taught by Bancroft...