Word: weitsman
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Kuhn scored his second touchdown on another one-yard run, ending an 11-play 73-yard drive with 53 seconds remaining in the first half. A.J. Weitsman kicked the second of his three extra points and it was 14-3 at the intermission; Erik Hinterbichler had kicked a 38-yard field goal for Dartmouth...
...sacked Terrell back at the Princeton two-yard line, forcing a punt that allowed the Big Red to take possession on the home teams 46-yard line.A 15-yard shovel pass from Ryan Kuhn to Luke Siwula paved the way to a 46-yard field goal by A.J. Weitsman, getting Cornell on the scoreboard.The Big Red immediately regained possession with an onside kick and scored on a 39-yard field goal from Weitsman.Weitsman added a fourth-quarter field goal to bring the visitors within 14-9, and they later grabbed a 17-14 advantage with Siwula?...
...with 119 yards on the ground. The Big Red (3-3, 1-2) opened the scoring in the first quarter with a touchdown run by Ryan Kuhn, but DiGiacomo responded with a 24-yard TD pass to Schreck. The teams traded field goals in the second quarter, with A.J. Weitsman booting a 37-yarder for Cornell and Steve Morgan kicking a 25-yarder for Brown. Kuhn, who finished with 143 rushing yards and 147 passing yards, ran for another touchdown in the third quarter. But Brown’s Brandon Markey returned a kickoff 92 yards for touchdown to make...
...rushed for 132 yards.CORNELL 57, GEORGETOWN 7ITHACA, N.Y.—Ryan Kuhn rushed for 85 yards and three touchdowns Saturday as Cornell beat Georgetown 57-7.Kuhn also was 8-of-10 passing for 79 yards and another score, helping the Big Red offense pile up 323 total yards. A.J. Weitsman kicked two field goals.Georgetown (3-4) was limited to just 86 yards and Cornell (3-2) led 29-0 by halftime.Georgetown’s only score came at the end of the third quarter with a 23-yard touchdown pass from Ben Hostetler to Harrison Beacher.Hostetler completed five...
...There appears to be justification for 'sensible' bullishness," reported Herbert H. Weitsman of L. F. Rothschild & Co. last week. This cautious appraisal illustrated Wall Street's changing mood. Only a month ago, traders sat in their storm cellars, waiting for the market squall that would knock stocks lower and lower. Since then, noticing patches of blue in the sky, they have gradually emerged. Most Streeters last week felt that the market was not going to take a hard fall, and may even be headed for a strong summer rally. Last week the market rose for the fifth...
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