Word: foulness
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...trophy the 1931 team won a cup donated by an anonymous alumnus of the University. The game was fast and close, with the regular six chukkers ending in a 5 to 5 deadlock. The only foul of the encounter came in the second chukker, when L. A. Shaw '30, of the University team fouled Gerry, who scored from the 20-yeard line on the penalty place shot granted to him. FRESHMAN UNIVERSITY Nicholas, No. I No. 1. Shaw Gerry, No. 2 No. 2, Burnett Jenkins, No. 3 No. 3, Cotton Clark. back back, Mandell...
Score Freshman 6, University 5, Goals Shaw 3. Gerry 2. Jenkins 2. Nicholas. Burnett, Mandell, Clark. Foul Shaw. Time Seven chukkers of 10 minutes each. Referee Samuel Hopkins...
...target for the miners' rage; in 1906 he was the target for a bullet that killed him. Haywood with two others was held for the murder; the news of the trial filled the press and three names filled the news. Most of all, Haywood, the thick-lipped, scarfaced, foul-mouthed friend to every man in the world who had to work like a slave; Darrow, the gentle, sorrowful, immensely kind, and immensely clever Chicago lawyer; and Borah, lofty, muscular, and furious, who hated Haywood not because he hated radicals, but because he thought Haywood had killed or helped...
Howard Whitmore '29 held the champions of the Orient to five hits, only one of which, a long drive by Migatake along the right field foul line, was an extra base clout...
...above in the positive. But now I am inclined to believe negatively-How on earth could the conductor of your Sport Column overlook the wonderful victory won by the "Tomcats" of Ashland, Kentucky? How does their "clean play" record of going through the entire tournament without a single personal foul compare in "reader interest" with your recent story (under "Records") about the fat man from Hamburg who swam the sea lion to sleep...