Word: brownings
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...morning session yesterday Coach Horween limited work to signal drill the first eleven lining up as follows: John Prior '29 and G. K. Brown '29 ends; C. A. Pratt '28 and F. A. Clark '29, rackles; Daniel Simonds '28 and Guilford Stewart '28, guards; R. W. Turner '28, center; D. V. Kelley '28, quarterback; David Guarnaccia '29, J. P. Crosby '29, and T. G. Moore '29, backs. The same team, with the exception of W. W. Lord '28 and B. H. Strong '28 at ends, went in at the start of the afternoon scrimmage...
...substitutes were sent in individually, instead of in teams, in the following order: ends, G. K. Brown '28 and John Prior '29, R. H. O'Connell '30 and J. L. Coombs ocC, J. G. Doughlas '30 and G. L. Lewis '30, James Lawrence '29 and F. A. Pickard '29; tackles, J. E. Barrett '29 and H. L. Levin '29; guards, B. C. Tripp '28 and David Shaw '29, B. W. Norris '28 and G. I. Shapiro '28, H. L. Morris '30 and John Parkinson '29; centers, Dudley Bell '28, A. E. Bigelow '29, and B. H. Dorman '29; quarterbacks...
...John Brown, after murdering five exponents of Negro slavery. shut himself up in a garrison at Osawatomie and was later taken prisoner, tried found guilty, executed, made the subject of a song. In 1859 at Osawatomie, famed Horace Greeley addressed the convention which was beginning to organize the Republican Party in Kansas. In 1910 at Osawatomie, Theodore Roosevelt, back from hunting wild animals in Africa, made a speech on "New Nationalism," which loudly thumped the doings of his former proteg; William Howard Taft, and led to the forming in 1912 of the Progressive or "Bull Moose" party...
Usually he avoids company. Except for large, liquid brown eyes, he is unattractive in appearance, small, dark, easily embarrassed, almost shrinking in person. When he avoided college he probably spared himself many miseries. Though he weighs only 125 pounds, his appetite is large . . . steak and lamb chops for breakfast. He sleeps long and soundly. Despite his father's prominence, he is so carefully unobtrusive that he might have reached his present age without attracting more than statistical notice, were it not for his precipitous enthusiasms and precocious successes...
...crowds, voices rough with cheering, rose from the robin's egg blue stands, and settled them selves in $40,000,000 worth of au- tomobiles. F. Ambrose Clark's tal ly-ho wound its horn and dashed away. Out over the magic carpet swarmed 51 brown men, armed with stomps. They mended the magic carpet, smoothing the hoof cuts of the ponies. Next week the magic carpet would be smooth and green again and the thousands gather for the series' second game...