Word: fullbacks
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...field, Harvard has more talent than any other Eastern team. Returning are All-American candidates in goalie Shep Messing, fullback Chris Wilmot, and forwards Charlie Thomas and Phil Kydes. The big names missing are top scorer Sol Gomez and goalie Bill Meyers, but with Messing in the net and record-setting freshman Felix Adedeji, Gomez and Meyers will not be missed for long...
GRIER JONES, 25, is considered by some veterans one of the most impressive young pros to join the tour in years. A star high school fullback in Wichita, Kans., he was wooed by football scouts from several colleges. Instead he chose to go to Oklahoma State on a golf scholarship, where he won the 1968 N.C.A.A. championship. Relying on a rhythmically compact swing, he won $37,193 in his first full season on the tour, and was named the 1969 Rookie of the Year. Off to a so-so start after winning $55,913 last season, Jones echoes the sentiments...
...result will startle more than a few opponents next season. Restic sets up his offense in the tight "T," the spread, the single wing, and the "I"; he splits both ends, uses double slots, and there are times when the fullback is the only man in the backfield. Yes, the quarterback goes in motion...
...team, when you get out there on the field today, look straight through the purple shades and into the eyes of that Yale fullback in the paisley helmet. Think of him and Erich Segal and good of Charley Reich tossing flowers at each other in the Pierson College dining hall as Kingman Brewster broadcasts the Fugs out of his office window. Think of jean-and-work shirt-bedecked Yalies pouring out of Skull and Bones to spend their GM dividend checks on grass and anti-war ads in the New York Times. And win this one for Consciousness...
...taught at all. "If you have to ask what jazz is," Louis Armstrong once observed, "you ain't got it." His view is both right on and slightly wrongheaded. Schooling alone can no more produce a creative jazz player than a novelist, poet or even an All-America fullback. Yet the nurturing of naturally gifted kids is a proud and longstanding challenge to the American academic scene. Any young jazz player can certainly stand some formal polishing of his delayed triplets, skimmed notes, quarter-tone vibratos and other "words" in the jazz vocabulary. Says Clarinetist Jimmy Giuffre, head...