Word: yale-princeton
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...Scolding Yale alumni for the goal post riot which followed the last Yale-Princeton football game, Yale's President James Rowland Angell declaimed: "There will be no general, much less complete, cure until our American college groups, both graduate and undergraduate, come to realize that bad manners and poor sportsmanship are the marks of the mucker. . .." Honest President Angell stopped, reflected. "I have a piece of a goal post myself," he confessed, then quickly weaseled: "It was presented to me, however...
...eliminated from the workout as Casey concentrated on passes and gave the team defensive practice in a dummy scrimmage with a team made from a combination of Jayvee and Freshman players. The dummy scrimmage and a demonstration of Yale plays were run through under the direction of Horween, Adam Walsh, and Bill Murray, all of whom scouted the Yale-Princeton game last Saturday...
...bookies" were taking bets on the New Hampshire game, one betting financier refused to give better than 5-4 odds on the Wildcats' chances of winning. What a change in football history that is! Shades of those days when Brown was the pre-Yale setup and the whole "A" team left Cambridge to watch the Yale-Princeton encounter, confident that back in Cantabrigia the subs would be able to run the Bruins off the field...
...Yalemen recall the 1921 Yale-Princeton football game in which Right End Justin Sturm stopped Princeton's Gilroy from getting away for a touchdown, helped his team win 13 to 7. Since then Justin Sturm has been a minor investigator for Montgomery Ward, a laborer in a glass factory, a gang foreman with a Chicago construction company. In 1926 Harper Bros, published his first novel (The Bad Samaritan). Last week Yalemen and others were able to see Justin Sturm's latest accomplishment-an exhibition of sculpture at Manhattan's Ferargil Galleries...
Anyone of the many fathers who witnessed the Yale-Princeton game, Saturday, might have decided that the correct thing to do was to send his son to Harvard. For an autogyro piloted by Leslie B. Cooper, a Princeton graduate, towed a long red advertisement, "Send Your Son to Harvard," over the Bowl before the game. Mr. Cooper, chased to the ground at the airport, refused point-blank to say who was paying for the advertisement. He was working for Roosevelt Field, he said, and the contract for the job was nobody's business. "It's bad enough for a Princeton...