Word: ties
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...teams played 80 minutes to end in a 4-4 tie to split the series; in 1933 Harvard won in overtime on Bob Saltonstall's goal; and last year Captain Joe Gilligan scored for Yale in an extra period...
Twenty-three Belmont birds were billed to sing in Manhattan's Rockefeller Center last week, and, according to advance notice, they would prove their skill with solos, quartets, sextets, choruses. The bullfinch, first on the program, was obviously stagestruck. Trainer Belmont waved his head until his Windsor tie trembled. The finch careened too, but his tongue stayed tied. If the canaries were disappointing in song, they at least knew when to start and stop. They trilled a few chords, gave a slight suggestion of harmony...
...Freshmen placed four men last night to tie for first place with the Yale yearlings. Henry R. Ames, John C. Harkness, David S. Glueck, and Paul M. Glendinning qualified in the 145, 165, 175, and heavyweight divisions...
...outclassed from the start, trailing 25 to 14 at the half, but this was Heaven compared to the first agonizing minutes of the game when the Feslermen trailed 15 to 1. The Blue and White led by Crowley, Bill Nash, Ganzenmuller, showed clearly that the Lions deserved the tie for League leadership they gained by the victory...
Unperturbed by all this furor, a swart, mop-haired, black-toothed man in morning coat and badly-adjusted tie motored last week to the White House Executive Offices. Though he looked like a Mexican bandit, he was in fact Dr. Francisco Castillo Najera, soldier, surgeon, poet, linguist, bon vivant, art collector, idol of Geneva newshawks, statesman and diplomat. Inside the office he found President Roosevelt smilingly erect, heard the State Department's sleek Chief of Protocol James Clement ("Jimmy") Dunn intone: "The Mexican Ambassador...