Word: scotts
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Against the Blue the Harvard team maintained the pace it set in the encounter with the University Club. If Yale had started Warner, the game might have been closer for the first-period goals by Scott and Clark should never have reached the net. But by the same token, if Harvard had not utilized an all-substitute defense composed of Coady and Howard at the end of the second stanza, Knight's goal would probably have been averted...
...work of the starting forward line tamped it as distinctly superior to the second-string trio, and also to any combination Yale had to offer. Zarakov's two goals were both gems; Scott's all-around play ranked him with Noble as the outstanding player on the ice; Tudor failed to score, but threatened often. The second line played true to form, failing to produce any goals, but checking the Yale attack well. When this trio was on the ice the game often slowed up and several minutes passed with little action...
...letters have been gone over for anything that might be torn out of the context; bits (and good bits they are) are stuck in from the diary he kept during a tour on the continent. His genius for parody is at par in a novelette that takes Sir Walter Scott for a dizzy ride. The whole thing is a hodge-podge of good, bad and indifferent, consistently interesting only to a person who takes everything so seriously that he must study the development of the another of "Alice...
HARVARD UNIVERSITY CLUB Tudor r.w. l.w. Hodder Scott c. c. Owen Zarakov l.w. r.w. Everett Ellison r.d l.d. Muloney Clark l.d. r.d. Marshall Morrill g. g. Fitzgerald...
...game was marked by absence of penalties one only having being inflicted. The summary follows. HARVARD LAVAL Tudor, Gross l.w. r.w. Vanasse, Lemieux Scott, Chase c. c. Fortier, Blais Zarakov, Hamlen r.w. l.w. Mills, R. Matte Ellison, Howard l.d. rd. A. Matte, Massee Clark, Coady r.d. l.d. Taschercan Morrill g. g. Labrie...