Word: plays
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...first quarter Schmitz kicked the ball from some distance in front of the Crimson goal and the wind carried it up over the goalie's head and into the Harvard cage. The play was very even for the second and third quarters, Harvard keeping the ball in Dartmouth territory the majority of the time, but the Crimson forwards were unable to score...
...similar out of season match held last year. Dartmouth was the victor by a 9 to 6 score. Due to the fact that it is not an official contest. Freshmen are allowed to play on both teams...
Service has gone out of fashion and most undergraduates have to be wheedled into work that was once done ungrudgingly. Harvard men do not take part in Social Service as they once did. Much of the work in the education of boys who play in the streets of Cambridge and Boston goes undone while Harvard students use their time to their own advantage. To this the answer may cynically be, "What...
...fresh recurrence of wild gun play on the part of officers of the peace comes nearer home with the assault on a Harvard student by a policeman of three weeks standing. The complications of violated traffic signals and the search for a stolen car happily caused no more damage than the puncturing of a hat. But a change of a few degrees in the course of the bullet would have meant death...
...being a great sportsman" is the opinion of M. E. Sprague, captain of the Cadet eleven and for three years and All-American tackle. Sprague was forced to leave the game early on account of a broken nose. Sprague also complimented the Crimson ends. "The Harvard wings were stopping play after play, overshadowing the rest of the linemen. The first disastrous fumble paving the way for our subsequent touchdown was the result of a bad pass from center but the fumble were merely the breaks of the game which may overtake any team." Biff Jones, Army coach, also complimented...