Word: stanzas
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...game at defence also contributed several neat plays. The goalie situation however advanced no farther because the B. U. forwards were practically unable to break through and give Harvard's net-tenders a fair test. Ellis played the first and third periods and Draper relieved him during the second stanza. Both of them had so few opportunities, however, that it seems the first game will not do much towards the selection of a regular goalie...
Harvard opened the scoring in the first stanza when Broadbent tallied on a beautiful shot. The play continued evenly until Morris, forward for the Elis, knotted the count in the second period...
...from Evanston, 111., reported that a blonde girl had sold to housewives some "lily bulbs" which proved, after a week in water, to be stones. Peculiarities of the report were its complete omission of names and its precious form. It was written in something approximating rhymed couplets. The first stanza-paragraph rhymed "sundry" with "money." The third did better, rhyming "money" with "sunny." The fifth and final stanza, typical of the rest, read as follows...
Harvard's two goals came as the result of a kick in the first period by D. M. Frame '32, assisted by Dirk Bodde '30, and a long, hard kick by H. H. Broadbent '32, in the fourth stanza. Three of Amherst's scores were made when the ball bounced from Harvard players into the Crimson's won net. The Amherst team, however, outplayed Harvard and put the Crimson on the defense for most of the game...
Coach Carr's charges started out in the first period by tallying early, when D. B. Dorman '32 kicked the ball into the net after a pass from D. M. Frame '32, left inside forward. This count was doubled in the second stanza when Frame, taking a pass from H. H. Broadbent '32, was able to break through the defense of the Northeastern goalie for the second time...