Word: harlowmen
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...with the first Crimson score coming directly after two successive roughing penalties. Cleo also had a 15-yarder called against him for forcing a H.C. back into the wall, but close observers attributed it more to boos from the Holy Cross side than to Cleo's play. Fortunately, the Harlowmen came away without injuries. HARVARD HOLY CROSS Coulson, l.e. r.e., Roberts Dewey, l.t. r.t., Strojny Rodis, l.g. r.g., Cregar Fisher, c. c., Kruoff Drvaric, r.g. l.g., Reilly Davis, r.t. l.t., Parker Florentino, r.e., l.e., Dieckelman Goethals, q.b. q.b., Ball O'Donnell, l.h.b. r.h.b., Farrell Gannon, r.h.b. l.h.b., Sheridan Moravec...
...strength before it has played a game, reports emanating from Storrs, Conn., habitat of the U-Conn-Huskies, as the Crimson's first opponent, likes to be called, seem to indicate that the men from the Nutmeg State should enter the Stadium on at least even terms with the Harlowmen...
...Samborski's number one boy on the mound for the Varsity baseball team, is the same young man whose 200 pounds of fullback left Dick Harlow's "Informal" line a sadder and wiser crew last fall, when Moravec helped the New London Submarine Base in its lambasting of the Harlowmen. This fall he's on our side...
...along with frequent post game extras. A couple of steals were perpetrated on Yale in its own territory of New Haven in both 1906 and 1940, "scooping" the Yale News both times. The latter was quite frankly a fake, since the reader, after being attracted by the blazing headline "HARLOWMEN THUMP BLUES," was referred for the score to a non-existent page three...
...basis of the season's records, neither team can claim any definite superiority. Yale won handily from Tufts, while the Crimson lost an early encounter by 7 to 6. Brown, on the other hand, defeated the Elis by two touchdowns and lost to the Harlowmen by one, both games being recorded by the sportswriters as upsets. Popular prognostications, as mentioned above, side with Howie Odell and the Blues. Even the Boston newspapermen, including Jerry Nason of the Glope and happy Davo Egan of the Record are picking Yale--only Arthur Daley of the New York Times has been gracious enough...