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	<title>The Mikael Nylander blog</title>
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		<title>The Mikael Nylander blog</title>
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		<title>A handsome quintain still stands on Offham village</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/06/12/a-handsome-quintain-still-stands-on-offham-village/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Jun 2008 20:11:11 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A handsome quintain still stands on Offham village green, in Kent,
 although it is no longer used for the skilful practice of former
 days. It is the custom to hoist married men, who are not blest with
 children, on the quintain, which is made to revolve rapidly.
 Sometimes discontented and disobedient wives share the same [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=52&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>A handsome quintain still stands on Offham village green, in Kent,<br />
 although it is no longer used for the skilful practice of former<br />
 days. It is the custom to hoist married men, who are not blest with<br />
 children, on the quintain, which is made to revolve rapidly.<br />
 Sometimes discontented and disobedient wives share the same fate.<br />
 Chester was famous for its Easter sports, when the mayor with his<br />
 mace, the corporation with twenty guilds, marched to the Rood-eye,<br />
 to play at football. But &#8220;inasmuch as great strife did arise among<br />
 the young persons of the same city&#8221; on account of the game, a<br />
 change was made in the reign of Henry VIII., and foot-races and<br />
 horse-races were substituted for the time-honoured football, and an<br />
 arrow  <a href="http://ohlund.futurehockeystars.com/30473/All-My-GOOD-Hockey-Cards.aspx">All My Good Hockey Cards Clip</a> of silver was given to the best archer.<br />
 But Easter sports are almost finished: however, we have not long to<br />
 wait for another popular anniversary; for the famous Hock-tide<br />
 sports always took place a fortnight after Easter, and much<br />
 amusement, and profit also, were derived from the quaint observances<br />
 of Hock Monday and Tuesday. The meaning of the word and the origin<br />
 of the custom have been the subjects of much conjecture; but the<br />
 festival is supposed to be held in remembrance of the victory of our<br />
 Saxon forefathers over the Danes in the time of Ethelred. The custom<br />
 was that on Hock Monday the men should go out into the streets and<br />
 roads with cords, and stop and bind all the women they met,<br />
 releasing them on payment of a small ransom. On the following day<br />
 the women bound the men, and the proceeds were devoted to charitable<br />
 purposes. It is to be noted that the women always extracted the most<br />
 money, and in the old churchwardens accounts we find frequent<br />
 records of this strange method of collecting subscriptions&#8211;_e.g._,<br />
 St. Lawrences, Reading, A.D. 1499:&#8211;&#8221;Item, received of Hoc money<br />
 gaderyd&#8221; (gathered) &#8220;of women xx_s_. Item, received of Hoc money<br />
 gaderyd of men iiij_s_.&#8221; We also find that the women had a supper<br />
 given to them as a reward for their exertions, for there is the<br />
 &#8220;item for wives supper at Hock-tide xxiij_d_.&#8221;<br />
 The observance of Hock-tide seems to have been particularly popular<br />
 in the ancient town of Reading. At Coventry there was an &#8220;old<br />
 Coventry Play of Hock Tuesday,&#8221; which was performed with great<br />
 delight before Queen Elizabeth at Kenilworth: the players divided<br />
 themselves into two companies to represent the Saxons and the Danes:<br />
 a great battle ensued, and by the help of the Saxon women the former<br />
 were victorious, and led the Danes captive. The queen laughed much<br />
 at the pageant, and gave the performers two bucks and five marks in<br />
 money.<br />
 So ends the month of sunshine and of shower; but the rustic youths<br />
 are making ready for the morris-dance, and the merry milk-maids are<br />
 preparing their ribbons to adorn themselves for the revels of May<br />
 Day. The May-pole is being erected on the village green, and all is<br />
 in readiness for the rejoicings of to-morrow.<br />
 CHAPTER V.<br />
 MAY.<br />
 &#8220;Colin met Sylvia on the green<br />
       Once on the charming first of May,<br />
     And shepherds neer tell false, I ween,<br />
       Yet twas by chance, the shepherds say.<br />
 &#8220;Colin he bowd and blushd, then said,<br />
       Will you, sweet maid, this first of May,<br />
     Begin the dance by Colin led,<br />
       To make this quite his holiday?<br />
 &#8220;Sylvia replied, I neer from home<br />
       Yet venturd, till this first of May;<br />
     It is not fit for maids to roam,<br />
       And make a shepherds holiday.<br />
 &#8220;It is most fit, replied the youth,<br />
       That Sylvia should this first of May<br />
     By me be taught that love and truth<br />
       Can make of life a holiday.&#8221;&#8211;LADY CRAVEN.</p>
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		<title>Davis   MacNider   Dibble de Saulles Moffat</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/06/11/davis-macnider-dibble-de-saulles-moffat/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jun 2008 10:01:13 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Davis   MacNider   Dibble
 de Saulles
 Moffat   Cadwalader   Edwards   Walton   Wentz   Geer   Rotter
 WE BEAT ANDOVER]
 This wonderful start of the Lawrenceville team was a goading spur to its
 opponents. Johnnie Barnes, an ex-Lawrenceville boy, now quarterback on
 the Andover [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=51&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>Davis   MacNider   Dibble<br />
 de Saulles<br />
 Moffat   Cadwalader   Edwards   Walton   Wentz   Geer   Rotter<br />
 WE BEAT ANDOVER]<br />
 This wonderful start of the Lawrenceville team was a goading spur to its<br />
 opponents. Johnnie Barnes, an ex-Lawrenceville boy, now quarterback on<br />
 the Andover team, seemed fairly inspired as he urged his team on. Eddie<br />
 Holt was called upon time and again. He was making strong advances,<br />
 aided by French, Hine and Porter. Together they worked out a touchdown.<br />
 But Lawrenceville rallied and for the rest of the game their teamwork<br />
 was masterly. Bat Geer, who was later a Princeton Varsity player,<br />
 Charlie de Saulles and Billy Dibble, each scored touchdowns, making<br />
 three altogether for their school.<br />
 Thus Lawrenceville, with the score 20 to 6, stepped forth into a new era<br />
 and entered the larger football world where she was to remain and<br />
 <a href="http://www.onlinesportgames.info/c-9/p-1/s-datum/Baseball/a-2897/Japanese-Baseball.aspx">Japanese Baseball</a>  increase her heroic accomplishments in after years.<br />
 It is needless to say that the night following this victory was a<br />
 crowning one in our preparatory football experiences. Bonfires were<br />
 lighted, speeches were the order of the hour, and members of the team<br />
 were the guests of honor at a banquet in the Upper House. There was no<br />
 rowdy &#8220;revelry by night&#8221; to spoil the memory of the occasion. It was<br />
 just one simple, fine and fitting celebration of a wholesome school<br />
 victory on the field of football.<br />
 LAST YEAR AT LAWRENCEVILLE<br />
 It was up to Billy Dibble, the new captain, to bring about another<br />
 championship. We were to play Andover a return game there. Captain<br />
 Dibble was left with but three of last years team as a foundation to<br />
 build on. Dibbles team made a wonderful record. He was a splendid<br />
 example for the team to follow, and his playing, his enthusiasm, and<br />
 earnest efforts contributed much toward the winning of the Andover,<br />
 Princeton freshmen and Hill School games. There appeared at<br />
 Lawrenceville a new coach who assisted Street and George. He was none<br />
 other than the famous Princeton halfback, Douglas Ward, whose record as<br />
 an honored man in the classroom as well as on the football field was<br />
 well known to all of us, and had stood out among college athletes as a<br />
 wonderful example. He was very modest. I recall that some one once asked<br />
 him how he made the only touchdown against Yale in the 93 game. His<br />
 reply was: &#8220;Oh, somebody just pushed me over.&#8221;<br />
 Fresh in my memory is the wonderful trip that we boys made to Andover.<br />
 We were proud of the fact that the Colonial Express was especially<br />
 ordered to stop at Trenton for us, and as we took our seats in the<br />
 Pullman car, we realized that our long looked for expedition had really<br />
 begun.<br />
 We had a great deal of fun on the trip to Boston. Good old George<br />
 Cadwalader was the center of most of the jokes. His 215 pounds added to<br />
 the discomfort of a pair of pointed patent leather shoes, which were far<br />
 too small for him. As soon as he was settled in the train he removed<br />
 them and dozed off to sleep. Turk Righter and some of the other fun<br />
 makers tied the shoe strings together, and hung them out of the window<br />
 where they blew noisily against the window pane.</p>
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		<title>When the door had closed upon the three</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/06/09/when-the-door-had-closed-upon-the-three/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Jun 2008 18:21:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nylander92</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[When the door had closed upon the three, Sydney placed his crutches
 under his arms and moved over to the chair beside the couch.
 &#8220;Look here, Neil, you dont really think, do you, that youll have any
 trouble getting back into your place?&#8221;
 &#8220;I hardly know. Of course two weeks of idleness makes a big [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=50&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>When the door had closed upon the three, Sydney placed his crutches<br />
 under his arms and moved over to the chair beside the couch.<br />
 &#8220;Look here, Neil, you dont really think, do you, that youll have any<br />
 trouble getting back into your place?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;I hardly know. Of course two weeks of idleness makes a big difference.<br />
 And besides, Im losing a lot of practise. This new close-formation that<br />
 Mills is teaching will be Greek to me.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Its simple enough,&#8221; said Sydney. &#8220;The backs are bunched right up to<br />
 the line, the halfs on each side of quarter, and the full just<br />
 behind him.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Well, but I dont  <a href="http://sport-clocks.findincity.net/New-York/Warwick/399026/Warwick-Little-League-Inc.aspx">Us Sport Clocks.</a> see&#8211;&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Wait,&#8221; interrupted Sydney, &#8220;Ill show you.&#8221;<br />
 He drew a folded sheet of paper from his pocket and passed it to the<br />
 other. Neil scowled over it a moment, and then looked up helplessly.<br />
 [Illustration]<br />
 &#8220;What is it?&#8221; he asked. &#8220;Something weird in geometry?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;No,&#8221; laughed Sydney, &#8220;its a play from close-formation. I drew it this<br />
 morning.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Oh,&#8221; said Neil. &#8220;Lets see; what&#8211;Here, explain it; where do I come<br />
 in?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Why, your position is at the left of quarter, behind the center-guard,<br />
 and a little farther back. Full stands directly behind quarter. See?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Pshaw! if we get into a crowd like that,&#8221; said Neil, &#8220;well get all<br />
 tied up.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;No you wont; not the way Mills and Devoe are teaching it. You see, the<br />
 idea is to knife the backs through; there isnt any plunging to speak of<br />
 and not much hurdling. The forwards open up a hole, and almost before<br />
 the balls well in play one of the backs is squirming through. Quarter<br />
 gives you the ball at a hand-pass, always; theres no long passing done;<br />
 except, of course, for a kick. Being right up to the line when play<br />
 begins it only takes you a fraction of a second to hit it; and then, if<br />
 the holes there youre through before the other side has opened their<br />
 eyes. Of course, it all depends on speed and the ability of the line-men<br />
 to make holes. Youve got to be on your toes, and youve got to get off<br />
 them like a streak of lightning.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Well, maybe its all right,&#8221; said Neil doubtfully, &#8220;but it looks like<br />
 a mix-up. Who gets the ball in this play here?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Right half. Left half plunges through between left-guard and center to<br />
 make a diversion. Full-back goes through between left tackle and end<br />
 ahead of right half, who carries the ball. Quarter follows. Of course<br />
 the play can be made around end instead. What do you think of it?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;All right; but&#8211;I think Id ought to have the ball.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;You would when the play went to the right,&#8221; laughed Sydney. &#8220;The fact<br />
 is, I&#8211;this particular play hasnt been used. I sort of got it up<br />
 myself. I dont know whether it would be any good. I sometimes try my<br />
 hand at inventing plays, just for fun, you know.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Really?&#8221; exclaimed Neil. &#8220;Well, you are smart. I could no more draw all<br />
 those nice little cakes and pies and things than I could fly. And it&#8211;it<br />
 looks plausible, I think. But Im no authority on this sort of thing.<br />
 Are you going to show it to Devoe?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Oh, no; I dare say its no use. It may be as old as the hills; I<br />
 suppose it is. Its hard to find anything new nowadays in<br />
 football plays.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;But you dont know,&#8221; said Neil. &#8220;Maybe its a good thing. Ill tell<br />
 you, Syd, you let me have this, and Ill show it to Mills.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Oh, Id rather not,&#8221; protested Sydney, reddening. &#8220;Of course it<br />
 doesnt amount to anything; I dare say hes thought of it long ago.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;But maybe he hasnt,&#8221; Neil persuaded. &#8220;Come, let me show it to him,<br />
 like a good chap.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Well&#8211;But couldnt you let him think you did it?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;No; Id be up a tree if he asked me to explain it. But dont you be<br />
 afraid of Mills; hes a fine chap. Come and see me to-morrow night,<br />
 will you?&#8221;<br />
 Sydney agreed, and, arising, swung himself across the study to where his<br />
 coat and cap lay.<br />
 &#8220;By the way,&#8221; he asked, &#8220;wheres Paul to-night?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Hes calling on Cowan,&#8221; answered Neil.</p>
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		<title>Neils and Pauls college life began early the next</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/06/06/neils-and-pauls-college-life-began-early-the-next/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jun 2008 17:01:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nylander92</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Neils and Pauls college life began early the next morning when,
 sitting side by side in the dim, hushed chapel, they heard white-haired
 Dr. Garrison ask for them divine aid and guidance. Splashes and flecks
 of purple and rose and golden light rested here and there on bowed head
 and shoulders or lay in shafts [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=49&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>Neils and Pauls college life began early the next morning when,<br />
 sitting side by side in the dim, hushed chapel, they heard white-haired<br />
 Dr. Garrison ask for them divine aid and guidance. Splashes and flecks<br />
 of purple and rose and golden light rested here and there on bowed head<br />
 and shoulders or lay in shafts across the aisles. From where he sat Neil<br />
 could look through an open window out into the morning world of greenery<br />
 and sunlight. On the swaying branch of an elm that almost brushed the<br />
 casement a thrush sang sweet and clear a matin of his own. Neil made<br />
 several good resolutions that morning there in the chapel, some of which<br />
 he profited by, all of which he sincerely meant. And even Paul, far less<br />
 impressionable than his friend, looked uncommonly thoughtful all the way<br />
 back to their room, a way that led through the  <a href="http://danielsedin.futurehockeystars.com/34930/Canucks-vs--Avalanche--11--+-4-1-08-+-Vancouver-offense.aspx">Canucks Vs. Avalanche (11) &#8211; 4/1/08 &#8211; Vancouver Offense Clip</a> elm-arched nave of<br />
 College Place and across the common with its broad expanses of<br />
 sun-flecked sward and its simple granite shaft commemorating the heroes<br />
 of the civil war.<br />
 At nine oclock, with the sound of the pealing bell again in their ears,<br />
 with their books under their arms and their hearts beating a little<br />
 faster than usual with pleasurable excitement, they retraced their path<br />
 and mounted the well-worn granite steps of College Hall for their first<br />
 recitation. What with the novelty of it all the day passed quickly<br />
 enough, and four oclock found the two lads dressed in football togs and<br />
 awaiting the beginning of practise.<br />
 There were some sixty candidates in sight, boys&#8211;some of them men as far<br />
 as years go&#8211;of all sizes and ages, several at the first glance<br />
 revealing the hopelessness of their ambitions. The names were taken and<br />
 fall practise at Erskine began.<br />
 The candidates were placed on opposite sides of the gridiron, and half a<br />
 dozen footballs were produced. Punting and catching punts was the order<br />
 of the day, and Neil was soon busily at work. The afternoon was warm,<br />
 but not uncomfortably so, the turf was springy underfoot, the sky was<br />
 blue from edge to edge, the new men supplied plenty of amusement in<br />
 their efforts, the pigskins bumped into his arms in the manner of old<br />
 friends, and Neil was happy as a lark. After one catch for which he had<br />
 to run back several yards, he let himself out and booted the leather<br />
 with every ounce of strength. The ball sailed high in a long arching<br />
 flight, and sent several men across the field scampering back into the<br />
 grand stand for it.<br />
 &#8220;I guess youve done that before,&#8221; said a voice beside him. A short,<br />
 stockily-built youth with a round, smiling face and blue eyes that<br />
 twinkled with fun and good spirits was observing him shrewdly.<br />
 &#8220;Yes,&#8221; answered Neil, &#8220;I have.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;I thought so,&#8221; was the reply. &#8220;But youre a freshman, arent you?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Yes,&#8221; answered Neil, turning to let a low drive from across the<br />
 gridiron settle into his arms. &#8220;And I guess youre not.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;No, this is my third year. Ive been on the team two.&#8221; He paused to<br />
 send a ball back, and then wiped the perspiration from his forehead. &#8220;I<br />
 was quarter last year.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Oh,&#8221; said Neil, observing his neighbor with interest, &#8220;then youre<br />
 Foster?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Thats me. What are you trying for?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Half-back. I played three years at Hillton.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Of course; youre the fellow Bob Devoe was talking about&#8211;or one of<br />
 them; I think he said there were two of you. Which one are you?&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Im the other one,&#8221; laughed Neil. &#8220;Im Fletcher. Thats Gale over<br />
 there, the fellow in the old red shirt; he was our captain at Hillton<br />
 last year.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Neil sat down amid a veritable roar of applause</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/06/04/neil-sat-down-amid-a-veritable-roar-of-applause/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Jun 2008 16:01:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Neil sat down amid a veritable roar of applause, and Paul, totally
 unembarrassed by the praise and acclaim, smiled with satisfaction. &#8220;That
 was all right, chum,&#8221; he whispered. &#8220;I guess weve got them on the
 run, eh?&#8221;
 But Neil shook his head doubtfully. Cries of &#8220;Vote! Vote!&#8221; arose, and in
 a moment or two the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=48&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>Neil sat down amid a veritable roar of applause, and Paul, totally<br />
 unembarrassed by the praise and acclaim, smiled with satisfaction. &#8220;That<br />
 was all right, chum,&#8221; he whispered. &#8220;I guess weve got them on the<br />
 run, eh?&#8221;<br />
 But Neil shook his head doubtfully. Cries of &#8220;Vote! Vote!&#8221; arose, and in<br />
 a moment or two the balloting began. While this was proceeding<br />
 announcement was made that the annual Freshman Class Dinner would be<br />
 held on the evening of the following Monday, October 7th. When the<br />
 cheers occasioned by this information had subsided the chairman arose.<br />
 &#8220;The result of the balloting, gentlemen,&#8221; he announced, &#8220;is as follows:<br />
 Livingston, 97; Gale, 45. Mr. Livingston is elected by a majority<br />
 of 52.&#8221;<br />
 Shouts of &#8220;Livingston! Livingston! Speech! Speech!&#8221; filled the air, and<br />
 were not stilled until some one arose and announced that the<br />
 president-elect was not in the hall. Paul, after a glance of<br />
 bewilderment at Neil, had sat silent in his chair with something between<br />
 a sneer and a scowl on his face. Now he jumped up.<br />
 &#8220;Come on; lets get out of here,&#8221; he muttered. &#8220;They act like a lot of<br />
 idiots.&#8221; Neil followed, and they found themselves in a pushing throng at<br />
 the door. The chairman was vainly clamoring for some one to put a motion<br />
 to adjourn, but none heeded him. The crowd pushed and shoved, but made<br />
 no progress.<br />
 &#8220;Open that door,&#8221; cried Paul.<br />
 &#8220;Try it yourself,&#8221; answered a voice up front. &#8220;Its locked!&#8221;<br />
 A murmur arose that quickly gave place to cries of wrath and<br />
 indignation. &#8220;The sophs did it!&#8221; &#8220;Where are they?&#8221; &#8220;Break the door<br />
 down!&#8221; Those at the rear heaved and pushed.<br />
 &#8220;Stop shoving, back there!&#8221; yelled those in front. &#8220;Youre squashing us<br />
 flat.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Everybody away from the door!&#8221; shouted Neil. &#8220;Lets see if we cant get<br />
 it open.&#8221; The fellows finally fell back to some extent, and Neil, Paul,<br />
 and some of the others examined the lock. The key was still there, but,<br />
 unfortunately, on the outside. Breaking the door down was utterly out of<br />
 the question, since it was of solid oak and several inches thick. The<br />
 self-appointed committee shook its several heads.<br />
 &#8220;Well have to yell for the janitor,&#8221; said Neil. &#8220;Where does he hang<br />
 out?&#8221;<br />
 But none knew. Neil went to one of the three windows and raised it.<br />
 Instantly a chorus of derision floated up from below. Gathered almost<br />
 under the windows was a throng of sophomores, their upturned faces just<br />
 visible in the darkness.<br />
 &#8220;O Fresh! O Fresh!&#8221; &#8220;Want to come down?&#8221; &#8220;Why dont you jump?&#8221; These<br />
 gibes were followed by cheers for &#8220;04&#8243; and loud groans. Neil turned and<br />
 faced his angry classmates.<br />
 &#8220;Look here, fellows,&#8221; he said, &#8220;we dont want to have to yell for the<br />
 janitor with those sophs there; thats too babyish. The keys in the<br />
 outside of the lock. I think I can get down all right by the ivy, and<br />
 Ill unlock the door if those sophs will let me. If two or three of you<br />
 will follow I guess we can do it all right.&#8221;<br />
 &#8220;Bully for you!&#8221; &#8220;Plucky boy!&#8221; cried the audience. But  <a href="http://iginla.futurehockeystars.com/33255/Jarome-Iginla-garbage-bag-day.aspx">Jarome Iginla Garbage Bag Day</a> for a moment none<br />
 came forward to share the risk. Then Paul pushed his way to the window.<br />
 &#8220;Here, Ill go with you, chum,&#8221; he said, with a suggestion of swagger.<br />
 &#8220;We can manage those dubs down there alone. The rest of you can sit down<br />
 and tell stories; well let you out in a minute,&#8221; he added scathingly.<br />
 &#8220;Thats Gale,&#8221; whispered some one. &#8220;Fresh kid!&#8221;, added another angrily.<br />
 But the gibe had the desired effect. Four other freshmen signified their<br />
 willingness to die for their class, and Neil climbed on to the broad<br />
 window-sill. His reappearance was the signal for another outburst from<br />
 the watching sophomores.<br />
 &#8220;Dont jump, sonny; you may hurt yourself.&#8221; &#8220;Hes going to fly, fellows!<br />
 Good little Freshies got wings!&#8221; &#8220;Say, well let you out in the<br />
 morning! Good-night!&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Besides the harvesthome there was also observed</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/06/02/besides-the-harvesthome-there-was-also-observed/</link>
		<comments>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/06/02/besides-the-harvesthome-there-was-also-observed/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Jun 2008 11:31:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nylander92</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Besides the harvest-home there was also observed another feast of a
 similar character in the spring, when the sheep were shorn. A
 plentiful dinner was given by the farmer to the shearers and their
 friends, and a table was often set in the open village for the young
 people and children. Tusser, who wrote a [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=47&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>Besides the harvest-home there was also observed another feast of a<br />
 similar character in the spring, when the sheep were shorn. A<br />
 plentiful dinner was given by the farmer to the shearers and their<br />
 friends, and a table was often set in the open village for the young<br />
 people and children. Tusser, who wrote a book upon _Five Hundred<br />
 Points of Husbandry_, did not forget the treats which ought to be<br />
 given to the labourers, and alludes to the sheep-shearing festival<br />
 in the following lines&#8211;<br />
 &#8220;Wife, make us a dinner; spare flesh, neither corn,<br />
      Make wafers and cakes, for our sheep must be shorn;<br />
      At sheep-shearing, neighbours none other things crave,<br />
      But good cheer and welcome like neighbours to have.&#8221;<br />
 We have in many villages and towns a feast called &#8220;the Wakes,&#8221; which<br />
 is one of the oldest of our English festivals. The day of &#8220;the<br />
 Wakes&#8221; is the festival of the Saint to whom the parish church is<br />
 dedicated, and it is so called because, on the previous night, or<br />
 vigil, the people used to watch, or &#8220;wake,&#8221; in the church till the<br />
 morning dawned. It was the custom for the inhabitants of the parish<br />
 to keep open house  <a href="http://sport-clocks.findincity.net/California/Marina-Del-Rey/268260/Cwc-Sports.aspx">Sport Clocks</a> on that day, and to entertain all their relations<br />
 and friends who came to them from a distance. In early times the<br />
 people used to make booths and tents with the boughs of trees near<br />
 to the church, and were directed to celebrate the feast in them with<br />
 thanksgiving and prayer. By degrees they began to forget their<br />
 prayers, and remembered only the feasting, and other abuses crept<br />
 in, so at last the &#8220;waking&#8221; on the eve of the festival was<br />
 suppressed. But these primitive feasts were the origin of most of<br />
 our fairs, which are generally held on the dedication festival of<br />
 the parish church.[13] The neighbours from the adjoining villages<br />
 used to attend the wakes, so the peddlers and hawkers came to find a<br />
 market for their wares. Their stalls began to multiply, until at<br />
 last an immense fair sprang into existence, which owed its origin<br />
 entirely to the religious festival of &#8220;the wakes.&#8221; Fairs have<br />
 degenerated like many other good things, and we can hardly realize<br />
 their vastness in the middle ages. The circuit of a fair sometimes<br />
 was very great, and it would have been impossible in those days to<br />
 carry on the trade of the country without them. The great<br />
 Stourbridge Fair, near Cambridge, I have described in my former book<br />
 on _English Villages_. The booths were planted in a cornfield, and<br />
 the circuit of the fair, which was one of the largest in Europe, was<br />
 over three miles. All kinds of sports were held on these occasions:<br />
 plays, comedies, tragedies, bull-baiting, &amp;c., and King James was<br />
 very wroth with the undergraduates of Cambridge who would insist<br />
 upon frequenting Stourbridge Fair rather than attend to their<br />
 studies.<br />
 The &#8220;Wakes,&#8221; or village feast, was a great day for all sports and<br />
 pastimes. A writer in the _Spectator_ describes the &#8220;country wake&#8221;<br />
 which he witnessed at Bath. The green was covered with a crowd of<br />
 all ages and both sexes, decked out in holiday attire, and divided<br />
 into several parties, &#8220;all of them endeavouring to show themselves<br />
 in those exercises wherein they excelled.&#8221; In one place there was a<br />
 ring of cudgel-players, in another a football match, in another a<br />
 ring of wrestlers. The prize for the men was a hat, and for the<br />
 women, who had their own contests, a smock. Running and leaping also<br />
 found a place in the programme. In Berkshire back-sword play and<br />
 wrestling were the favourite amusements for vigorous youths, and men<br />
 strove hard to win the honour of being champion and the prizes which<br />
 were offered on the occasion. There were &#8220;cheap jacks,&#8221; and endless<br />
 booths containing all kinds of fairings, ribands, gingerbread cakes,<br />
 and shows, with huge pictures hung outside of giants and wild<br />
 Indians, pink-eyed ladies, live lions, and deformities of all kinds.<br />
 There were minor sports, such as climbing the pole, jumping in<br />
 sacks, rolling wheelbarrows blindfolded, donkey races, muzzling in a<br />
 flour-tub, &amp;c.; but the back-sword play was the chief and most<br />
 serious part of the programme.</p>
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		<title>If that great event which was run off at the Marlboro</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/06/01/if-that-great-event-which-was-run-off-at-the-marlboro/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 02:51:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nylander92</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[If that great event which was run off at the Marlboro Fair and Cattle
 Show could be witnessed to-day, thousands of admirers would love to see
 in action those trainers, see them as the Natick Hose truck defeated
 the Westboro team that day, and sent the Westboro contingent home with
 shattered hopes and empty pocketbooks.
 [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=46&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>If that great event which was run off at the Marlboro Fair and Cattle<br />
 Show could be witnessed to-day, thousands of admirers would love to see<br />
 in action those trainers, see them as the Natick Hose truck defeated<br />
 the Westboro team that day, and sent the Westboro contingent home with<br />
 shattered hopes and empty pocketbooks.<br />
 &#8220;In connection with Army-Navy games,&#8221; writes Crolius of Dartmouth, &#8220;Ill<br />
 never forget Mike Murphys wonderful ability to read mens condition by<br />
 their mental  <a href="http://zetterberg.futurehockeystars.com/35024/Re--Teemu-Selanne-and-Henrik-Zetterberg-are-horny.aspx">Re: Teemu Selanne And Henrik Zetterberg Are Horny</a> attitude. He was nearly infallible in his diagnosis.&#8221;<br />
 Once we questioned Mike. He said, &#8220;Go get last years money back, youre<br />
 going to lick them!&#8221; And true to his uncanny understanding he was right.<br />
 Was it any wonder that men gave Murphy the credit due him?<br />
 Mike Murphy had a strong influence over the players. He was their<br />
 ever-present friend. He could talk to a man, and his personality could<br />
 reach farther than any of the coaches. The teams that Murphy talked to<br />
 between the halves, both at Yale and Pennsylvania, were always inspired.<br />
 Mike Murphy always gave a man something of himself.<br />
 It is interesting to read what a fellow trainer, Keene Fitzpatrick, has<br />
 to say of Mike:<br />
 &#8220;Mike first started to train at Yale. Then he went to the Detroit<br />
 Athletic Club in Detroit; then he came back to Yale; then he went to the<br />
 University of Pennsylvania; then back to Yale again, and finally back to<br />
 the University of Penn, where he died.<br />
 &#8220;We were always great friends and got together every summer; we used to<br />
 go up to a little country town, Westboro, on a farm; had a little room<br />
 in a farmhouse outside of the town of Natick, and there we used to get<br />
 together every year (Mike and Fitz) and share our opinions, and compare<br />
 and give each other the benefit of our discoveries of the seasons work.<br />
 &#8220;Murphy was one of the greatest sprinters this world ever had. They<br />
 called him stucky because he had so much grit and determination. The<br />
 year after Mike died the Intercollegiate was held at Cambridge. All the<br />
 trainers got together and a lot of flowers were sent out to Mikes grave<br />
 in Hopkinton, Massachusetts.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>There is always a temptation to feed chicks too</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/05/30/there-is-always-a-temptation-to-feed-chicks-too/</link>
		<comments>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/05/30/there-is-always-a-temptation-to-feed-chicks-too/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 May 2008 01:51:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nylander92</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[There is always a temptation to feed chicks too soon after they are
 hatched. We should always wait at least twenty-four hours to give them
 a chance to become thoroughly dry. The general custom of giving wet
 cornmeal for the first feed is wrong. Always feed chicks on dry food
 and you will avoid a [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=45&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>There is always a temptation to feed chicks too soon after they are<br />
 hatched. We should always wait at least twenty-four hours to give them<br />
 a chance to become thoroughly dry. The general custom of giving wet<br />
 cornmeal for the first feed is wrong. Always feed chicks on dry food<br />
 and you will avoid a great deal of sickness. An excellent first food<br />
 is hard-boiled egg and corn bread made from cornmeal and water without<br />
 salt and thoroughly baked until it may be crumbled. Only feed a little<br />
 at a time, but feed often. Five times a day is none too much for<br />
 two-week-old chicks.<br />
 One successful poultryman I am acquainted with gives, as the first<br />
 feed, dog biscuit crushed. All the small grains are good if they are<br />
 cracked so that the chicks can eat them. The standard mixture sold by<br />
 poultry men under the name &#8220;chick food&#8221; is probably the best. It<br />
 consists of cracked wheat, rye, and corn, millet seed, pinhead<br />
 oatmeal, grit, and oyster shells. Do not feed meat to chicks until<br />
 their pin feathers begin to show, when they may have some well-cooked<br />
 lean meat, three times a week.<br />
 There is quite an art in setting a hen properly. They always prefer a<br />
 dry, dark place. If we are sure that there are no rats around, there<br />
 is no better place to set a hen than on the ground. This is as they<br />
 sit in nature and it usually seems to be the case that a hen that<br />
 steals her nest will bring out more chicks than one that we have<br />
 coddled. Eggs that we are saving for hatching should be kept in a cool<br />
 place but never allowed to freeze. They should be turned every day<br />
 until they are set. Hens eggs will hatch in about twenty-one days.<br />
 The eggs that have failed to hatch at this time may be discarded. When<br />
 we move a broody hen we must be sure that she will stay on her new<br />
 nest before we give her any eggs. Test her with a china egg or a<br />
 doorknob. If she stays on for two nights we may safely give her the<br />
 setting. It is always better when convenient to set a hen where she<br />
 first makes her nest. If she must be moved, do it at night with as<br />
 little disturbance as possible. It is always a good plan to shut in a<br />
 sitting hen and let her out once a day  <a href="http://matssundin.futurehockeystars.com/30177/My-Hockey-Cards-for-Trade.aspx">Hockey Cards Trade</a> for feed and exercise. Do not<br />
 worry if in your judgment she remains off the nest too long. The eggs<br />
 require cooling to develop the air chamber properly, and as a rule the<br />
 hen knows best.<br />
 Young chickens are subject to a great many diseases, but if they are<br />
 kept dry and warm, and if they have dry food, most of the troubles may<br />
 be avoided. With all poultry, lice are a great pest. Old fowls can<br />
 dust themselves and in a measure keep the pest in check, but little<br />
 chicks are comparatively helpless. The big gray lice will be found on<br />
 a chicks neck near the head. The remedy for this is to grease the<br />
 feathers with vaseline on the head and neck. The small white lice can<br />
 be controlled by dusting the chicks with insect powder and by keeping<br />
 the brooder absolutely clean. A weekly coat of whitewash to which some<br />
 carbolic acid has been added will keep lice in check in poultry houses<br />
 and is an excellent plan. Hen-hatched chicks are usually more subject<br />
 to lice than those hatched In incubators and raised in brooders, as<br />
 they become infected from the mother. Some people say that chicks have<br />
 lice on them when they are hatched, but this is not so.</p>
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		<title>For ten years after McCornack had stopped coaching</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/05/27/for-ten-years-after-mccornack-had-stopped-coaching/</link>
		<comments>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/05/27/for-ten-years-after-mccornack-had-stopped-coaching/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 May 2008 12:01:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nylander92</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[For ten years after McCornack had stopped coaching at Dartmouth, the
 captain of the Dartmouth team would wear his sweater in a Harvard game
 as an emblem to go by. The sweater is now worn out, and no one knows
 where it is.
 If Eddie Holts record at Princeton told of nothing else than the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=44&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>For ten years after McCornack had stopped coaching at Dartmouth, the<br />
 captain of the Dartmouth team would wear his sweater in a Harvard game<br />
 as an emblem to go by. The sweater is now worn out, and no one knows<br />
 where it is.<br />
 If Eddie Holts record at Princeton told of nothing else than the making<br />
 of a great guard, this would be enough to establish Holts ability as a<br />
 guard coach. Eddie and Sam Craig played alongside of each other in the<br />
 Yale defeat of 97. Holt says:<br />
 &#8220;The story of the making of Sam Craig is the old story of the stone the<br />
 builders rejected, which is now the head stone of the corner. Sam never<br />
 forgot the 97 defeat and I never have myself. After this game Sam gave<br />
 up football, although he was eligible to play. Two years later, after<br />
 Princeton had been defeated by Cornell, something had to be done to<br />
 strengthen the Princeton line. Sam Craig was at the Seminary. I<br />
 remembered him,&#8221; said Holt, &#8220;and went over to his room and told him that<br />
 he was needed. I shall never forget how his face lit up as he felt there<br />
 was an opportunity to serve Princeton and a chance to play on a winning<br />
 team; a chance to come back. He responded to my hurry call, eager to<br />
 make good. Coaching him was the finest thing I ever did in football.<br />
 Good old Sam, I can see him now, standing on the side lines telling me<br />
 that he guessed he was no good. You can never imagine how happy I was to<br />
 see him improve day by day after I had taken a hold of him. The great<br />
 game he played against Yale in 99 will always be one of my happiest<br />
 recollections in football. My joy was supreme; the joy that comes to a<br />
 coach as he sees his man make good&#8211;Sam sure did.&#8221;<br />
 It is very doubtful whether the inside story of Harvards victory over<br />
 Yale in 1908 has ever been told. Those who remember this game know that<br />
 the way for victory was paved by Ver Wiebe and Vic Kennard. Harry<br />
 Kersburg, a Harvard coach, writes of that incident:<br />
 &#8220;The summer of 1907 and 1908, Kennard worked for several hours each day<br />
 perfecting his kicking. This fact was known to only one of the coaches.<br />
 In 1906 and 1907, Kennard played as a substitute but was most<br />
 unfortunate in being smashed up in nearly every game in which he played.<br />
 On account of this record, he was given little or no attention at the<br />
 beginning of the 1908 season, even though the one coach who had great<br />
 confidence in Kennards ability as a kicker rooted hard for him at every<br />
 coaches meeting. About the middle of the season, Dave Campbell came on<br />
 from the West and with the one lone coach became interested in Kennard.<br />
 On the day of the Springfield Training School game, most of the Harvard<br />
 coaches went down to New Haven, leaving the team in charge of Campbell<br />
 and Kennards other rooter. The psychological moment had arrived.  <a href="http://iginla.futurehockeystars.com/32762/Iginla-and-Regehr-s-post+game-reaction.aspx">Iginla And Regehrs Post-game Reaction</a> Just<br />
 as soon as the Harvard team had rolled up a tidy little score, Kennard<br />
 was sent into the game and instructions were given to the quarterback<br />
 that he was to signal for a drop kick every time the Harvard team was<br />
 within forty yards of the opponents goal&#8211;no matter what the angle<br />
 might be. The game ended with Kennard having kicked four goals from the<br />
 field out of six tries. Nearly all of them were kicked from an average<br />
 distance of thirty yards and at very difficult angles. At the next<br />
 coaches meeting serious consideration was given to what Kennard had<br />
 done and from that time on he came into his own.<br />
 &#8220;Now for Rex Ver Wiebe. For two years he had plugged away at a line<br />
 position on the second team. In his senior year he was advanced to the<br />
 Varsity squad. With all his hard work it seemed impossible for him to<br />
 develop into anything but a mediocre lineman. The line coaches, with<br />
 much regret, had about given up all hope. One afternoon, two weeks<br />
 before the Yale game, one of the line coaches was standing on the side<br />
 lines talking with Pooch Donovan about Ver Wiebe. Pooch said little, but<br />
 kept a close watch on Ver Wiebe for the next two or three days. At the<br />
 end of that time he came out with the statement that if Ver Wiebe could<br />
 be taught how to start, he would rapidly develop into one of the best<br />
 halfbacks on the squad. Poochs advice was followed and in the Yale<br />
 game, Ver Wiebes rushes outside tackle were one of the features of the<br />
 game and were directly responsible for the ball being brought down the<br />
 field to such a position that it was possible to substitute Kennard, who<br />
 kicked a goal from the field and won the first victory for Harvard<br />
 against Yale in many years.<br />
 &#8220;It is a strange coincidence that the first of Harvards string of<br />
 victories against Yale was won by two men who a few weeks before the<br />
 game were in the so-called football discard.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Jack Munn</title>
		<link>http://nylander92.wordpress.com/2008/05/25/jack-munn/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 25 May 2008 15:11:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nylander92</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Jack Munn, a former Princeton halfback, tells the following story:
 &#8220;My brother, Edward Munn, was the manager of the Princeton team in 1893.
 In the spring of that year there was a conference with Yale
 representatives to decide where the game was to be played the following
 fall. Berkeley Oval, Brooklyn, Manhattan Field, and the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=nylander92.wordpress.com&blog=2465898&post=43&subd=nylander92&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p>Jack Munn, a former Princeton halfback, tells the following story:<br />
 &#8220;My brother, Edward Munn, was the manager of the Princeton team in 1893.<br />
 In the spring of that year there was a conference with Yale<br />
 representatives to decide where the game was to be played the following<br />
 fall. Berkeley Oval, Brooklyn, Manhattan Field, and the respective<br />
 fields of the two colleges all came under discussion, and I believe that<br />
 some of the newspapers must have taken it up. One afternoon in the<br />
 Murray Hill Hotel, when representatives of Yale and Princeton were<br />
 discussing the various possibilities, a bellboy knocked at the door and<br />
 handed my brother an elaborately engraved card on which, among various<br />
 decorations, the name of Colonel Cody was to be distinguished. Buffalo<br />
 Bill was invited to come up, and it seems that, reading or hearing of<br />
 the discussion about the field for the game, he came to make a formal<br />
 offer of the use  <a href="http://sport-clocks.findincity.net/Ohio/Cleveland/409636/Investment-Advisors-International-Inc.aspx">Sporting Watches</a> of his tent. After setting forth the desirability of<br />
 staging the game under the auspices of his Wild West Show, he brought<br />
 his offer to a close with his trump card.<br />
 &#8220;For, gentlemen, said he, besides all the other advantages which I<br />
 have mentioned, there is this further attraction&#8211;my tent is well and<br />
 sufficiently lighted so that you can not only hold a matinee, but you<br />
 can give an evening performance as well.<br />
 &#8220;And those were the days of the flying wedge and two forty-five minute<br />
 halves with only ten minutes intermission!&#8221;<br />
 Walter C. Booth<br />
 Walter C. Booth, a former Princeton center rush, was one of the select<br />
 coterie of Eastern football men that wended its way westward to carry<br />
 the eastern system into institutions that had had no opportunity to<br />
 build up the game, yet were hungry for real football. Booths trip was a<br />
 successful one.<br />
 &#8220;In the autumn of 1900, after graduating from college, I arrived at<br />
 Lincoln, Nebraska, in the dual rôle of law student and football coach of<br />
 the State University,&#8221; says Booth. &#8220;This was my first trip west of<br />
 Pittsburgh and I viewed my new duties with some apprehension. All doubts<br />
 and fears were soon put at rest by the hearty encouragement and support<br />
 that I received and retained in my Nebraska football relations.<br />
 &#8220;Most of the Faculty were behind football, and H. Benjamin Andrews, at<br />
 that time head of the University, was a staunch supporter of the game.<br />
 Doctor Roscoe Pound, later dean of Harvard Law School, was the father of<br />
 Nebraska football. He had as intimate an acquaintance with the rule book<br />
 as any official I have ever known. His advice on knotty problems was<br />
 always valuable. James I. Wyer, afterward State Librarian of New York,<br />
 was our first financial director, and it was largely by reason of his<br />
 unflagging zeal that football survived.<br />
 &#8220;Football spirit ran high in the Missouri Valley and there were many<br />
 hard fought contests among the teams of Iowa, Missouri, Kansas and<br />
 Nebraska. Those who saw these games or played in them will never forget<br />
 them.<br />
 &#8220;Many amusing things happened in that section as well as in the East.<br />
 The Haskell Indians were a picturesque team. They represented the<br />
 Government School at Lawrence, Kansas&#8211;an institution similar to that of<br />
 Carlisle. In fact, many of the same players played on both teams at<br />
 different times. We always found them a hard nut to crack, and Redwater,<br />
 Archiquette, Hauser and other Indian stars made their names well known<br />
 on our field.<br />
 &#8220;John Outland, the noted Pennsylvania player, had charge of the Indians<br />
 when I knew them. He was a great player and a fine type of man, who<br />
 succeeded in imparting some of his own personality to his pupils. He<br />
 once showed me a dark faced Indian in Lawrence who must have been at<br />
 least six feet four inches tall and of superb physique. He was a full<br />
 blooded Cheyenne and went by the name of Bob Tail Billy. Outland tried<br />
 hard to break him in at guard, but as no one understood Bob Tails<br />
 dialect, and he understood no one else, he never learned the signals,<br />
 and proved unavailable.<br />
 &#8220;We traveled far to play in those days; west to Boulder, Colorado,<br />
 handicapped by an altitude of 5000 feet, south to Kansas City and north<br />
 as far as St. Paul and Minneapolis. We were generally about 500 miles<br />
 from our base. We were not able to take many deadheads.&#8221;</p>
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