Word: fouled
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Score--Leverett 31, Yale 17. Field goals--Leverett: Shapiro 5, Fields 3, Levan 2, Lovejoy 2, Henderson; Yale: Crowell 3, Van Wynckle 3, Irvin 2. Foul goals--Leverett: Henderson 3, Shapiro 2; Yale: Van Wynckle...
...favor of the Freshmen. In the second half the St. Anselm team sunk a number of goals and brought the score up to 20 all. With only two minutes to play and the score still even J. A. Fitzpatrick '35, playing left forward, sunk three foul shots bringing the Freshman out ahead. R. G. Fletcher '35 was the high scorer of the fray with a total of eight points. He was closely followed by J. D. Stephen '35 who made seven points, and Fitzpatrick with six. R. C. Boys '35, stellar player in past games, sprained his ankle...
...operating room of the not-too-distant future while Columbia University's Professor Marston Taylor Bogert was explaining to them last week why synthetically perfumed anesthetics should be developed soon. Synthetic perfumes, said Professor Bogert, are steadily replacing natural scents. If vanilla perfume can be made from foul-smelling asafetida, why not a pleasant anesthetic...
...officials to call every infraction of the rules and inflict the penalty at all times. It is a well known fact that a great majority of the coaches teach their mon "inside tricks" and that in a good many cases if players are reasonably certain that a foul will not be discovered, they will commit it. If the present drastic penalties will force coaches to teach their players to adhere to the rules at all times the new changes should gain their ends. But when a large penalty is at stake officials are often loath to call the foul. They...
...must agree with Mr. Bliven that the normal human being prefers the application of his theory to open discussion about it. Consequently, when one group of people wants to discard a system, say, of government, and another wants to retain it, they fight each other by fair methods or foul. Boiled down, the principle always practiced is that the end justifies the means. One of the means followed in warfare; another is suppression of free speech...