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Word: five-yard (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...perhaps the most excitement had come from the band's dancing prop men and the band's skillful integration of the philosophical and the musical when they spelled out Emmanuel Kant's surname and played a fine rendition of "Feeling Groovy." But B. U., after driving to the Harvard five-yard line on rushing, passed to Gary Capehart for the touchdown. Rick Frisbie and Fred Martucci weren't exactly expecting it. J. Bennington Peers and other stick-to-the-system people were probably distressed to see the Terriers, a weak passing team, throw in such a spot. But it worked...

Author: By Bennett ? Beack, | Title: Soaking Up the Bennies | 10/8/1969 | See Source »

...Harvard maneuvered play towards the Brown goal almost immediately. and only several broken passes within the Bruin five-yard line kept the Crimson from a try. A Brown violation gave the Crimson a penalty kick from the twenty-five, which Joe Daly narrowly missed, and Harvard began controlling play for the remainder of the half...

Author: By John L. Powers, | Title: Brown Dumps Ruggers, 'C' Squad Sole Winner | 10/6/1969 | See Source »

...Harvard died near the goal line and a pass by Smith sailed over Hornblower in the end zone, so Richie Szaro came in to kick a five-yard field goal...

Author: By Bennett H. Beach and Martin R. Garay, S | Title: Football Team Falls to Fired-Up Terriers | 10/6/1969 | See Source »

...rushed play after play, relying on its main strength, and when the Crimson stopped two successive plays for one-yard gains inside the five-yard line. Yetten threw a pass to halfback Gary Capehart, who had gotten behind the surprised Rick Frishie and Fred Martucci. The missed conversion gave Harvard a chance which it was not able to take advantage...

Author: By Bennett H. Beach and Martin R. Garay, S | Title: Football Team Falls to Fired-Up Terriers | 10/6/1969 | See Source »

...hand in Harvard's most profitable event, the mile. After allowing Penn's Jerry Williams to set the pace for seven laps. Crimson ace Royce Shaw took the lead and moved away from the field for the victory in 4:12.6. Enscoe and Spengler followed Shaw at five-yard intervals, with Enscoe's final kick just falling short of catching Shaw. The one-two-three sweep harvested a big 13 points for Coach Bill McCurdy. Gillis placed fifth...

Author: By Ricahrd T. Howe, | Title: Track Team Upsets Cadets in Heptagonals | 2/24/1969 | See Source »

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