Word: leas
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Against them will be a Princeton backfield that will be studded with such stars as LeVan, Constable, and Sandback, a line that contains Stoess, Montgomery, Weller, and Ritter, and ends such as Lea...
...these posts practically undisputed, although Charley Tell, 210-lb Sophomore, has frequently substituted for Ritter and showed up impressively. At left end the versatile Hugh MacMillan is sure to begin the contest, with his 60-yard kicks and glue-fingered pass-snagging being indispensable to the Tiger machine. Gil Lea, lanky right ender, is also a star man. John Paul Jones and Bill Roper constitute dependable reserves on the flanks, the former shining particularly in the Penn game...
PRINCETON Le Van Constable Sandbach Spofford 152 lbs 189 lbs 178 lbs 180 lbs Right Halfback Fullback Quarterback Left Halfback Lea Ritter Weller Montgomery Cullinan Stoess MacMillan 177 lbs 189 lbs 206 lbs 179 lbs 170 lbs 191 lbs 182 lbs Right End Right Tackle Right Guard Left Guard Center Left Tackle Left End Knapp Spring Nee Jones Gaffney Maser Kelly 174 lbs 209 lbs. 190 lbs 175 lbs 197 lbs 210 lbs 182 lbs Left End Left Tackle Left Guard Center Right Guard Right Tackle Right End Ford Bilodeau Hedblom Ecker...
...Luke Lea had vast political and other ambitions those days of 1906-1907. A thorough Southerner, member of an exalted Dixie family, rich, and venerated in his native Nashville, he made the initial mistake, when he conceived the idea of a personal newspaper organ, of choosing Northerners to pilot the sheet. Among those he chose were Editor Herman Suter, a Pennsylvanian, whose only Southern viewpoint was gained while a football star at Sewanee: an ex-AP-er, Smith, whose Yankee tang was all-too-revealing, as managing editor: a chief editorial writer . . . who had a Harvard accent...
...Tennessean went into receivership and last year its founder was jailed for defrauding a North Carolina bank of $1,384.000 (TIME, May 21, 1934). When, at 55, Luke Lea put on the striped suit of Convict No. 29,409 to begin a six-to-ten-year term, he laid all his troubles to "persecution" by a Nashville banker-politician named Paul Maclin Davis and his elder brother, U. S. Ambas- sador-at-Large Norman Hezekiah Davis. Last week Banker Davis and RFChairman Jesse Jones, who, though a Texan, was born & bred in Tennessee, found themselves in water heated...