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...score of 124 points with 15 touchdowns, 22 goals from touchdown and four goals from the field. Strupper, of Georgia Tech., who stands third in scoring honors, has crossed the goal line one more time than Oliphant, but he has only three goals form touchdown to his credit. The forth man in rank of individual high scoring is Fitzpatrick, of Boston College, and Gerrish, of Dartmouth stands fifth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PITTSBURG GIVEN FIRST PLACE BY NEW YORK TIMES WHILE UNIVERSITY ELEVEN PUT AT SIXTH POSITION | 12/4/1916 | See Source »

...inspiring visit them. By a singular coincidence have visited both Yale and Harvard most opportune times to learn of their histories. At the Yale Pageant I go very clear conception of the past history of the New Haven institution and here at Harvard I have had the good forth to attend the John Harvard birthday service in the Chapel. We have some pretty fine institutions in the South even though Harvard does beat some of the in football...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "COMING FROM HARVARD BADGE OF DISTINCTIC | 12/2/1916 | See Source »

...Sherman '20, received the kickoff and ran it back 40 yards before he was downed. The Freshmen tried plunges, passes and hidden ball plays, but were unable to advance and lost the ball on downs, after which both sides punted back and forth. C. E. Works '19 then intercepted a forward pass and ran to the 20-yard line but the seconds could make no headway and the ball was the Freshmen's. J. S. Higgins '20 got off a long punt which rolled to the second team's 30-yard line, but the seconds had succeeded in working...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FIVE TEAMS ON FIELD | 11/10/1916 | See Source »

...cumulative blow of Germany and who saved Europe, found many of her soldiers dying because they could not promptly be attended to. It was then that the American Ambulance was organized. Well in the rear for the first eight months, it served its novitiate carrying men back and forth from train to hospital. With April, 1915, it had come of such size as to warrant its formation into three field units: No. One at Dunkirk, No. Two in Lorraine, No. Three in the Vosges: What these sections went through, the very interesting articles and the letters to the inspector general...

Author: By C. G. Paulding ., | Title: The Crimson Bookshelf | 11/6/1916 | See Source »

With the political excitement becoming keener as November 7 draws near, the CRIMSON is planning a series of articles by men prominent in undergraduate affairs and who are more or less fixed to set forth their political views. In this connection any members of the University are invited to make use of the communication column of the CRIMSON for the expression of their opinions in regard to the coming Presidential election. This is not intended to make the CRIMSON the battlefield on which the opposing factions may hurl personal invectives and rant about preparedness or pacifism as the spirit...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMUNICATIONS WANTED | 10/24/1916 | See Source »

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