Word: hinkey
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...University of Pennsylvania. The largest representation of any college in any single year is five. Harvard had five players on the team in '90 and '92. The only players who have had a place on the team during four years are Marshall Newell of Harvard and F. A. Hinkey of Yale. Harvard has furnished five halfbacks, one quarterback, three centre men, two guards, five tackles and three ends. Of the substitutes, eleven have been chosen from Harvard, fifteen from Yale, seventeen from Princeton, eight from the University of Pennsylvania and one from Cornell...
...Yale men in college and out will rejoice that the football statements have been published. The testimony of the officials at the Springfield game is the best sort of proof of the falsity of the vicious newspaper attacks on Captain Hinkey. Such conclusive evidence completely exonerates him, as every fair-minded person must admit. While the university has never faltered in its loyalty to Captain Hinkey, the malicious misrepresentations of the press made a formal refutation of the charges against him imperative for the sake of Yale's good name...
...committee examined Captain Hinkey, who, although averse to carrying discussions into the public press, nevertheless on account of the gravity of the unfounded charges made against him states once for all and most positively, that he did not "knee" or otherwise maltreat Wrightington in the Springfield game, and that he has never been guilty of unfair roughness in any of the games in which he has taken part. Furthermore, his statement is corroborated by the fact that although he has played for seven years at Andover and at Yale, and hence under various umpires and referees, no official has ever...
...YORK, Dec. 16. - Upon the close of the football season, the Yale Football Association, in view of the charges of rough playing made against Captain Hinkey of the Yale football eleven, requested a committee composed of Professor E. L. Richards, Walter Camp, Henry E. Howland, George A. Adee, Howard Knapp, and Gene L. Richards, Jr., and others, men of recognized experience in football matters, to investigate the charges. These gentlemen found that all of the charges of roughness in the Springfield game have centered in the alleged wilful injury of Wrightington by Captain Hinkey. The officials of the game mentioned...
...tackled him, both of us being on the dead run. I made a diving tackle, jumping and tackling him about the knees. He fell on his side, falling towards Harvard's goal. It was a hard tackle, Wrightington striking the ground heavily. Before I made the tackle I heard Hinkey some distance behind me shouting to me to tackle Wrightington. Wrightington got up almost immediately, working his shoulder. I had heard the umpire's whistle for Harvard's off-side play and when I looked back I saw Hinkey for the first time during that play fully 10 yards back...