Word: quakerly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Crimson received the Quaker kick-off, and had to fight both a tough Penn squad and a high wind. Harvard moved into scoring position late in the first quarter, however, after moving the ball from its own 30 to its own 48. Halfback Tony Kilkuskie then took a pass from quarterback John McCloskey to Penn's 2 yard line, the day's longest play...
...territory by quick kicking in a third down. But Gahan fumbled and recovered his kick from left halfback, being thrown for a considerable loss. The pass from center for the fourth down punt was also lost, and this time Penn recovered on Harvard's 3-yard line. The Quaker's scored on the next play. Kohlman broke up Penn's attempted 2-point conversion...
Only a goal in the last 20 seconds of the game spoiled the varsity's unblemished Ivy record. This came from the foot of Penn's inside left, Robert Finney, who scored all the Quaker goals...
...first half. With five minutes gone in the first quarter, the Crimson scored when Cormac O'Malley cashed in on a garbage goal. The Penn goalie had dropped the ball on a corner kick, and in the ensuing melee O'Malley poked it in. Finney countered with the Quaker's first goal early in the second quarter...
...vulgarian press lord, whose horrible career is clearly based on that of megalomaniac Lord Northcliffe, creator of Britain's all-too-popular press. But the chief villain is one who usually appears as a fictional hero-the sensitive leftwing intellectual. Tony Caldecott had been the editor of a Quaker-financed liberal weekly and survives the war with a combat-won Military Cross and consciousness of a desperate cowardice known only to himself and his dead comrades. Between 1918 and 1939, he profitably combines sensational political journalism with the business of being an undercover agent of the Communist Party...