Word: marylander
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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First came Thomas Francis Bayard, Senator from Delaware, he who proudly records in his Congressional biography that his father, grandfather, great uncle, great-grandfather and great-great-grandfather, were all at various times Senators from Delaware. Mr. Bayard is to speak. So is John Philip Hill, Representative from Maryland, who last Summer dared Prohibition Commissioner Haynes to arrest him for making grape juice in his cellar...
Governor Ritchie of Maryland, Governor Elaine of Wisconsin, Senator Stanley of Kentucky, Senator Couzens of Michigan, were also " invited to speak." And among those " associated with the organization " and " expected to be in attendance " were: Gertrude Atherton; W. W. Atterbury of Pennsylvania; Senator Bruce of Maryland; Marshall Field; Mrs. Minnie Maddern Fiske; Kermit Roosevelt; Augustus Thomas, Owen Wister, Walter Damrosch...
...Brown 20 75 42 PRINCETON 17--Georgetown 0 2--Notre Dame 25 16--Johns H'kins 7 3--Navy 3 35--Swarthmore 6 0--Harvard 5 0--Yale 27 73 73 YALE 53--No. Carolina 0 40--Georgia 0 29--Bucknell 14 21--Brown 0 31--Army 10 16--Maryland 14 27--Princeton 0 217 38 AMHERST 0--Bowdoin 13 0--Union 0 7--Mass. Aggies 3 12--Wesleyan 10 7--Oberlin 14 41--Trinity 12 7--Williams 23 74 75 ARMY 41--Tennessee 0 0--NotreDame 13 28--Auburn 0 73--LebanonVal 0 10--Yale 31 44--Ark. Aggies...
...next week a slight slump came in the Yale play as might have been expected after the Army contest. Maryland invaded the Bowl with a strong eleven which proceeded to cross the Blue goal line twice before the first period had ended. Yale was dumbfounded. Soon, however, the visitors' attack began to break and the Bulldog eleven awoke to the task before it. in the second half, showing another great comeback as decisive as the one against the Army. Yale launched her offensive and ultimately won 16 to 14. But the Blue defense throughout the game was weak...
Showing itself the greatest offensive team developed at New Haven in years. Yale swept through and around Princeton last Saturday for a 27 to 0 victory. Gone was the defensive weakness of the Maryland encounter, gone the inability to stop an overhead attack such a Buckle had used so effectively. In fact in no department of play was Yale weak. All of her previous points of ineffectiveness seemed to have been eliminated. True, the Tigers were not in excellent physical trim; yet had they been it is doubtful if the Blue attack could have been stopped...