Word: center
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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NameClass Position Age Wt. Ht. School Adams, S. A. '30 Center 20 200 6 Oak Park H. Andres, H. '31 Center 19 182 5-10 Newton H. Armstrong, E. '30 Tackle 20 180 5-11 Loomis Bankart, N. M. '29 End 21 162 5-8 Dean Black, R. W. '29 Back 22 175 5-11 Lake Forrest Booma, H. E. '30 End 20 178 5-11 Clark School Borroughs, H. B. '31 Center 20 165 5-10 Manchester H. Breithut, F. R. '29 Back 22 175 5-10 Barringer H. Bromberg, G. '31 Guard 19 190 5-10 New Britain...
...with their first victory over Harvard and a 11 to 0 score. Their team was described as unusually heavy, the line averaging 220 pounds to the man from tackle to tackle. One of the conspicuous performers for the Crimson on that occasion was John Parkinson '05, who held the center position, and whose son is one of the probable players for this afternoon. Today, then, marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the opening of the Stadium...
...Mark's Crawford, G. ocC. Quarterback 23 150 5-6 St. Mark's Cunningham, J. S. '29 Guard 21 180 5-8 Milton Davis, F. S. '30 Tackle 20 185 6-1 Loomis Devens, A. L. Jr. '30 Back 20 150 5-8 Groton Dorman, B. H. '29 Center 22 177 5-11 Andover Douglas, J. G. Jr. '30 End 20 188 6-2 St. George's French, A. E. Jr. '29 Back 22 175 5-11 Worcester Gildea, J. H. '31 Center 20 175 6 Boston Latin Gilligan, T. W. '31 Quarterback 20 175 6 Exeter Grant...
...University team also carried the fight in the second period, most of the scrimmaging taking place on Clark's half of the field. The second goal was scored in this period by Bodde, who received a pass from center and carried the ball 40 yards down the field to score, unaided...
Your editorial in Monday's CRIMSON concerning "misrepresented merchandise" apparently circulated by a local paper is well taken. We do, however, suggest that you notice in the "official program" a rather ludicrous misrepresentation. B. H. Ticknor '31, center, is shown by a photograph of some youth in the football outfit of a furriner. It looks dangerously to me like an Eli outfit, and the average game-goer who cheers for Harvard does not like to have one of its stalwart heroes misrepresented as someone else in someone else's uniform. Sincerely yours, C. Lowell Winslow...