Word: shut
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Yale hockey team barely escaped a shut-out at the hands of the B. A. A. players Saturday night when Buchanan, a substitute, poked a goal past Donahue in the last two seconds of play. The B. A. A. seven out-skated the Yale forwards completely, scoring 6 goals. Incidentally the B. A. A. team was without the services of Skilton, the star point...
Washington & Jefferson was the first of the three teams to take Yale's measure. A wide-open attack, with a much-varied and bewildering aerial attack, completely baffied Captain Wilson's men, and they were defeated 16 to 7. Colgate, since downed by Syracuse with a 38 to 0 shut-out, was the next visitor at the Bowl, and a few trick plays gave them a 15 to 0 victory. The climax of the slump came when Brown, last Saturday easily defeated by the University substitutes, took the next game...
Both teams have had fairly successful seasons, each having won about half of their games. Yale beat Cornell 2 to 1, tied Princeton, but lost to the Springfield Y. M. C. A. by a score of 5 to 2. The University, on the other hand, shut out Springfield 4 to 0, but was defeated by Princeton 3 to 0. The Princeton team that won from the University was far stronger, however, than the aggregation Yale faced, as the Tiger forward line was weakened in the latter contest by the loss of three of its best players. The University team...
...shutting out Brown 2d, 14 to 0, on Soldiers Field yesterday, the second team brought a most successful season to a close. In all its five games the team has not been scored on, Groton, the Technology freshmen and the Princeton seconds, being shut out and Dean held to a scoreless tie. Yesterday's contest was marked by the same steady work which has characterized the team's play all season. The touchdowns were both made in the first half, one by Murray and the second by Appleton. Murray's score came after a series of gains through tackle...
...visited Boston for many theatrical moons. We know it could never be real, so we take refuge in "Mediaeval," and that is exactly the word. The spirit, the quaint vigor, the broad underlined humor of the situations mark it so for the spectator, even if he has his eyes shut. Robert Edmond Jones '10 has dressed the play and players in the colorful riot of an eastern bazaar. The very rags of the beggars have been schemed with an artist...