Word: toe
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...catch-can wrestling. Under these rules a fall will terminate each bout. In no case will the duration of preliminary bouts exceed five minutes. The final bouts will last ten minutes unless terminated sooner by a fall. Any hold is allowed except the hammerlock, strangle, full Nelson, and toe hold. There will be seven classes in which the men will wrestle: 115, 125, 135, 145, 158, 175 pounds, and over 181 pounds. Entrants will weigh in on the day of their match, and must be within the allowance for overweight, which is six pounds...
...Step, "Who Do You Love?"; 2, Fox-Trot, "Calicoco"; 3, One-Step, "The Further It Is From Tipperary"; 4, Fox-Trot, "Siren Song"; 5, Waltz, "Some Day"; 6, Fox-Trot, "When the Ships Come Home"; 7, One-Step, "The Tickle Toe"; 8, Fox-Trot, "Fancy Your Fancing Me"; 9, One-Step, "Sweet Little Butter-cup"; 10, Waltz, "Will you Remember,"; 11, One-Step, "My Dough Boy"; 12, Fox-Trot, "I'll Think of You"; 13, One-Step, "A Baby's Prayer at Twilight"; 14, Fox-Trot, "If You Look in Her Eyes"; 15, Waltz, "Missouri"; 16, Fox-Trot, "'N Everything...
...punts, in side stepping and dodging Yale tackles in a broken field, Pollard gave a peerless performance. His head line exhibition brought the crowd of 25,000 spectators up with a roar in the opening minutes of the final period. Catching a punt hoisted aloft to midfield by the toe of Harry Legore, Pollard dexterously threw off the Yale ends, started towards the right, drawing the entire pack of Yale tacklers in the direction, and then using a puzzling side step, switched to the left where he outstripped every Yale pursuer in a desperate sprint for the Yale goal line...
...veteran Harry LeGore has had a slightly infected toe and is lame, but will probably be ready for play by Saturday if needed. Bob Bingham also has a slight injury, and Rex Hutchinson has just recovered from one. He has again reported but has been used only on the second eleven regularly this week. Hutchinson weighs nearly 200 pounds and a great deal has been expected of him as a plunging full-back, but he has proved slow and has missed his signals repeatedly, and is a long way from choice as permanent full-back. Instead of presenting an eleven...
...line. Perhaps she can work up her off-tackle slashes so that they will carry farther than they did against Princeton, but if she can repeatedly get Guernsey anywhere from Harvard's forty-yard line on she may not need touchdowns in order to win. For Guernsey is a toe artist of real stature. As to the Yale players individually it is impossible to speak, because not being numbered, the various men were identified only by word of mouth and word of mouth is usually inaccurate and misleading. Guernsey, of course, was recognized because he did the punting...