Word: hunks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...after touchdown but this one mattered less. He had just run 68 yd. for Army's second touchdown which made the final score 12 to 0. Only once since 1917 has a Notre Dame team lost two games in succession. Bewildered, Notre Dame's Coach Heartley W. ("Hunk") Anderson said: "Last Saturday's game [against Southern California] took too much out of us. We had nothing left for today...
...scoring consistently in every period. TUFTS HARVARD SECONDS Chester, g. g., Brieson, Nichols Whittaker, l.f.b. r.f.b., Harrison Mazzola, r.f.b. l.f.b., Pollard, Clark Lgisley, l.h.b. r.h.b., Burke Smith, e.h.b. e.h.b., Wave Fairfield, r.h.b. l.h.b., Clark Sharkey, l.o.f. r.o.f., Draper Real, Saracco, l.i.f. r.i.f., Fragley Fletscher, Ganger, c.f. c.f., Chase Hunk, r.i.f. l.i.f., Whitney, Wolff Verge, r.o.f. l.o.f., Randelan...
...Knute Rockne, widow of Notre Dame's famed coach who was killed in an airplane accident in Kansas last March, watched Notre Dame, undefeated since 1928, open the season against Indiana University. Rockne's successor, Heartley ("Hunk") Anderson, used three teams, uncovered a new right-halfback, Joe Sheeketski who ran 70 yd. for the first of the four touchdowns that won for Notre Dame...
Thus Rev. Charles Leo O'Donnell, president of Notre Dame, to the 320 candidates for next autumn's football team, assembled for spring practice. He said that Heartley ("Hunk") Anderson would be the new coach. A famed Notre Dame guard from 1919 to 1921, then line coach for six years, and for two years head coach at St. Louis University, Anderson coached the Notre Dame line last year. His first assistant will be Jack Chevigny, shrewd backfield man of the 1928 team, who also coached last year under Rockne. Anderson's title will be "Senior Coach"; "Head...
...forward, he was conceded not a chance. His jumps last year were feeble. Everyone agreed that he was through but watched closely as he took a deep breath, drew his muscles taut and with a splendid lunge, threw his old body 12 ft. 10½ in., landing like a hunk of dough. The crowd was wild. "The Pride" had come back...