Word: line
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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During the first half neither side could gain a yard through their opponent's line. The Engineers' only score came in the second quarter when Whitten on a forward pass brought the ball to the 15-yard line. Two line plunges netted three yards, and W. W. Caswell '20 scored a field goal from the 18-yard line...
...last half the Artillery forced the play throughout. Cousens and F. D. Huntington '12, former University football and hockey star, played brilliantly for the Artillery together rushing the ball from mid-field to the 3-yard line when Huntington scored the touchdown...
...regatta Crew A won the highest honors by defeating both B and C, but B was only a quarter of a length behind the winner at the finish line. In the club races the Eliot crews showed to the best advantage, winning the more important of the races...
...follows: At 3.30 o'clock for the affirmative, B. H. Kuhns '22, P. R. Harmel '23, and W. J. Maier, Jr., '23; for the negative, M. J. Donner '21, B. F. Jones '22, and P. E. Green '20. In the evening debates at 7.30 o'clock the teams will line up as follows: Affirmative, J. J. Tutun IL, W. S. Holbrook, Jr., 21, A Starr '21; negative; E. D. Hutchinson '22, A. M. Stoddard '20, and G. P. Bickford...
...Seen by the CRIMSON" and "General Information for Yale Visitors" were the funniest things in the book, but the laugh limit is by no means two. The prologue, too, stands out--not by reason of its prime position, but because it carries (as they say) a punch in every line. You can like the prologue whether or not you care for poetry. In fact the less you care for poetry the more you'll like the prologue. And the same goes for what follows the prologue...