Word: goale
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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This game demonstrated the new rules concerning the play of the goalie. Both University Club goalies were guilty of kneeling before the net with the result that the referees called for a face-off 10 feet in front of the net with the defending team lined up on the goal line. On both of these occasions the goalies were able to prevent a score...
...once bewildered the over-rated Trojans with brilliant plays, throwing for losses Southern California's famed Plungers Plinckert and Duffield. Marchmont Schwartz flipped an 11-yd. pass to Quarterback Carideo who trotted eight yards farther for the first touchdown. They made three more after that. Their own goal was never in danger. Notre Dame 27, Southern California 0. Getting up speed for their charity game with Army, the Navy plungers slammed through the Penn line, tossed passes for long gains. Navy 26, Penn 0. A 76-yd. march in the last three minutes almost brought New York University...
...defensive trio will be S. L. Batchelder '31, at left defence, C. C. Cunningham '32, at right, and Captain Harwood Ellis '31, in the goal. This combination proved successful during the past season, and should be a telling factor during the coming...
Caterpillar Jr. Within 100-mi, of Los Angeles, his goal for a "junior transcontinental speed record,"* Gerald Nettleton. 20, of Toledo, Ohio, was hopelessly in the "soup." Floundering at 10,000 ft. in rain, fog and snow he "couldn't see ten feet ahead"; but he knew he was near the Cuyamaca Mts. To try a blind landing would be insane. The instruments froze; the magneto began to misbehave. Pilot Nettleton made his decision. He leveled off, throttled down, cut his switch, rolled out the door, waited and pulled his ripcord. Pilot Nettleton landed near a ranch-house...
...single game. At this game also the name of the Harvard captain was spelled out for the first time. Fifteen times during the season, Slade the drum-major as well as the leader of the band, sent the long silver baton soaring over the crossbar of the goal post and each time he gracefully retrieved it. The altitude record for baton throwing was set between the halves of the William and Mary game when Slade hurled the baton over the crossbar seven feet above the uprights of the goal post to a distance estimated at approximately 28 feet...