Word: scoring
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...most phenomenal single play of the season was made by wemple in the M.I.T. game, in which he kicked the ball a full 60 yards past the goalie and into the net for a score, to start a rally which gave the Crimson booters a 5 to 0 triumph. Although a fullback, he has figured in the scoring in several games. In the second Yale game it was largely his play which gave the Crimson a tie with the powerful Eli team...
...determined, Harvard was disgusted by the first play of the last quarter. On fourth down with 10 yd. to go Lassiter tossed the soggy slippery ball to Marling who waded 24 yd. for a touchdown. A few minutes later the game was over, Yale 19, Harvard o, most decisive score since 1915 when Harvard won 41-to-0. Yale men, apparently bewildered by rain, wind, mud and the excitement of seeing their team win its second game this year, rushed down and tore up their own goalposts...
...Biggest score of the week: West Liberty's 137-to-0, against Cedarville, at Wheeling, W. Va., with 71 points by Left Halfback Joe Korshalla...
...touchdown. Added misfortune for Northwestern was what happened to its amiable, hard-plunging halfback. Ernest ("Pug") Rentner; he broke a rib in the first quarter, found out about it at the half. McGuire of Wisconsin caught the kick-off and scuttled 85 yd. to a touchdown. Minnesota tied the score. Wisconsin got -another touchdown. Minnesota matched...
Perhaps it is only that Radcliffe has changed, though there are doubts on that score. Of course, the Vagabond wandered a bit confusedly through Gothic Yale Saturday, of course he drank cocktails with very smooth Elis, but, unexpectedly, he met Radcliffe after the game in a Harkness study. She was drying her shoes before the fire, and as she wriggled silken toes all was confessed. Not ships and sealing-wax were the topics of conversation, not the game, for Radcliffe felt very bad on that point (she had been there with a Yale man) but Harvard men themselves were dissected...