Word: goale
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Jayvee team, which faces Cornell here next Saturday, shared its three tallies equally. W. C. McGuckin '34 sent through the first Crimson counter in the third chukker. This goal was followed in the next stanza by a fast tally from the mallet of Richard Benson '33. L. R. Illoway '33, the regular No. 1 man was hurt in a scrimmage in the last chukker from which he managed to score a lucky goal and was replaced by T. B. Eastland '33 for the closing minute of the tilt...
Forester Clark '29, former Harvard polo star, was the mainstay of the opposition, leading his team and scoring a great many of its goals. The game was full of exciting ride-off duels, slashing, hooking, and stubborn goal line molees. The first chukker was one of stiff riding and brilliant saves for both sides, with W. F. Luton '33 and Crispin Cooke '32 gallantly holding off the better-mounted cavalrymen until the last minute of the period when Burrage poked through a goal from a stick-clicking scrimmage in which Captain F. S. Nicholas '33 lost his mallet...
...first chukker ended with Westwood and Harvard with one point each; the goal by W. F. Luton '33 following the first charge of the Crimson was soon answered by a spectacular shot from the mallet of Jasper Blandon of Westwood on a fast gallop the length of the field. Harvard rode into the lead in the next period, tallying thrice to Westwood's single score. Crispin Cooke '32, the University's diminutive back, and Luton charged the enemy territory in the last part of the third stanza, and scored one goal from a muddle in front of the posts, soon...
...constant advocacy of a United Europe has given him a unique eminence. No other European statesman of equal stature has dared to labor avowedly for that goal. It is true that the wholeheartedness of his zeal for that goal may reasonably be doubted, for M. Briand was first of all a Frenchman. He seemed at times, with the intense nationalism of his race, ready to discard his great conception to preserve the temporary dominance of France. His attitude to Germany was a curious oscillation between friendship and an involuntary suspicion. But it must be remembered that he had always...
...goal and a foul by Feustel matched a goal and a foul by C. H. Hageman '33, and Baskervill, respectively...