Word: indianas
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...other states have Harvard alumni in the following numbers: Alabama, 146; Arizona, 58; Arkansas, 104; California, 1,929; Colorado, 273; Delaware, 88; District of Columbia, 876; Florida, 263; Georgia, 247; Idaho, 62; Illinois, 1,690; Indiana, 459; Iowa, 387; Kansas, 176; Kentucky, 201; Louisiana, 123; Marvland, 422; Michigan, 570; Minnesota, 539; Mississippi, 48; Missouri, 689; Montana, 85; Nebraska, 170; Nevada, 22; New Jersey, 1,049; New Mexico, 35; New York, 7,482; North Carolina, 255; North Dakota, 45; Ohio, 1,652; Oklahoma, 131; Oregon, 237; Pennsylvania, 1,908; Phillipino Islands, 40; South Carolina, 115; South Dakota, 44; Tennessee, 175; Texas...
Famed Notre Dame produced a green but agile team and defeated Coe 28-7 as scouts from later season enemies (Army, Navy, Indiana, Minnesota, Detroit) watched narrowly, scribbled notes...
Early in October, 1921, a football team from the University of Indiana left the Stadium, after vainly attempting to check a powerful Crimson offense, on the short end of a 19 to 0 score. After a six year interlude in gridiron relations between Cambridge and the Middle West, the football representatives of Purdue, another Indiana university, appeared on the Stadium turf last Saturday and reversed by the same count the former Harvard Hoosier football verdict...
...denied the pleasure of seeing the Purdue band in action at the encounter in the Stadium today. One hundred and twenty-five men of Purdue, comprising the membership of the band, were unable to secure the necessary permission of the Board of Trustees to make the trip from Indiana to Cambridge...
...bass drum of Purdue will not boom in the Stadium this afternoon brings disappointment to the potential spectators, but relief to the Harvard Band. For according to rumor, the musicians who so unfortunately stayed at home not only possess the most gigantic drum in the history of Lafayette, Indiana, but are a group of men whose manoeuvres on the gridiron are equalled only by the warriors once in moleskin and silk. There was a time, just after the war, when the Harvard Band had a monopoly on football music, or at least on intermission parades; but those happy days...