Word: score
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Captain A. E. French '29 scored the first touchdown before two minutes were up. Taking the ball on his own 35-yard line on the first play, the Crimson leader pierced the center of the line and cutting sharply back raced through the scrub secondary for a touchdown. E. T. Putnam '30 booted the extra point into the score...
...next two touchdowns were the result of steady marches by the first team, both of them starting on the University 35-yard line. W. R. Harper '30 carried the ball over for the first score while David Guarnaccia '29 accounted for the second. Putnam's first try for the extra point was good but his second fell short...
...next score was the result of two plays, a 35-yard dash by Harper and a beautiful forward from French to Putnam carrying the ball 65 yards for the touchdown...
...behind the scrub line and Sumner Putnam '31, Holbrook, T. G. Moore '29, and A. W. Huguley '31 going in for the first team. The ball was given to the University eleven on the scrub 15-yard line, and on the second play Putnam ran thirteen yards for a score. The pigskin was brought out and this time placed on the scrub 20-yard line. After Huguley had made a few yards on three line bucks. Holbrook circled the left wing for the last touchdown...
...question by a CRIMSON reporter of several score Freshman about their opinion of "The History and Traditions of Harvard College" which was given to every Freshman in his registration envelope, brought out that about half of the class had not yet found time to read the booklet. Of those who had read it, all were enthusiastic in their praise, especially of the article on the history of Harvard by S. E. Morison '08. The short article by W. I. Nichols '26 on Habits. Customs, and Manners of Harvard ranked second in popularity owing to its monitory and constructively critical words...