Word: gaines
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...universities and coaching their teams, in most cases for salaries. In this way the game is made more than ever a matter of money, and Yale graduates become foot-ball professionals. We do not mean to say that the game should be restricted, but that other teams should gain their knowledge through contests on the field or through their own inventions, but not by a purchase from a Yale graduate of what has been entrusted to him for the benefit of his alma mater. Our victories on the water have been attributed to the peculiarities of a stroke which...
...Graduate School has just issued a pamphlet which gives an interesting account of the numbers in the school and from the many colleges in all sections of the country they have been drawn. The gain this year in numbers is not inconsiderable and it shows clearly what an important part of the University the department is fast growing to be. Perhaps nothing shows the position and influence that it holds among other colleges than the fact that six of its members for example, come from such a distant college as the University of Michigan, five from the University of California...
Thorn made one run of 12 yards between Worden and Shea, but otherwise there was no gain, and Hall kicked, Brewer making a fair catch almost at the centre of the field...
...gain of 15 yards by DeWitt, and short ones by Armstrong, Thorn and Hall, then three wedges gave Yale about 35 yards, but Hall dropped the ball on the next play, and Harvard...
Yale couldn't gain at first, but suddenly Hall started off round Brewer's end, and was only brought down when Brewer made the best tackle of the day. Twenty-five yards was the length of the run. DeWitt and Armstrong made short gains, and then DeWitt was given a big hole between Shea and Foster, and dodging Brewer got 25 yards to the 1 yard line before he was downed. On the next play he was pushed over the line, and then Hall kicked the goal by about a foot and tied the score...