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Word: sweetser (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...line-up. The men on team A were; ends, Tully and Bjorkman; tackles, Holleran and Parker; guards, Diehl and Smith; center, Whitaker; quarterback, Fallon; backs, Hall, Oberlander and Leavitt. Team B was made up of the following men; ends, Sage and Emerson; tackles, Allen and Hardy; guards, Prescott and Sweetser; center, Montgomery; quarterback, Stevens; backs, Reeder, Robinson, and Starrett...

Author: By Crimson STAFF Correspondent., (SPECIAL DISPATCH TO THE CRIMSON). | Title: In Hanover Camp-- | 10/22/1924 | See Source »

Coach Hawley is combing through last year's squad of substitutes and scrubs to fill the remaining positions. The men who are making strong bids for these positions are: Whitaker '25 and Davis '27, centers, Smith '25, Sweetser '25, and Duffy '26, guards, Parker '26, and Wallance, captain of last year's freshman, tackles, Fallon, a junior, is giving Dooley a good fight for the quarterback berth, while Robinson '26, halfback, and Ahiquist '25, fullback, have been working out with Team...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Graduation and Probation Shoot Big Green Squad Full of Holes as Football Practice Starts Off at Hanover | 9/27/1924 | See Source »

...same ball with skill consummate enough to subjugate ponderous Cyril Tolley, leader of the Britons, and his partner, Major Charles O. Hezlet. National Champion Max R. Marston, representing Philadelphia, and Robert Gardner, Chicagoan and U. S. captain, had subjugated W. A. Murray and E. F. Storey. Jess W. Sweetser, of Manhattan, and Harrison Johnston, of St. Paul, had beaten "Tony" Torrance and C. O. Bristowe. The only match the Britons had won was from the representatives of Pittsburgh and Atlanta, Walter C. Fownes and "Bobby" Jones, respectively, over whom two stouthearted worthies named Scott, the Hon. Michael and Robert...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Ghost | 9/22/1924 | See Source »

...ghost was a ghost only. Lunch over, play rebegun, it vanished forever. Huge Tolley tried to recall it with colossal drives and dogged putting that overcame Marston on the last green. The Hon. Michael Scott besought it by crushing Sweetser 7 and 6. Of the other English, none could raise a finger, all lost...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Ghost | 9/22/1924 | See Source »

...precious metals. Big men were present but a little man won? D. Clark ("Duckie") Corkran, of Baltimore (amateur champion of Pa. and Md.). In a stiff wind, he journeyed steadily around the nine difficult holes eight times in 300 strokes. His prize was a mashie of gold. Jess Sweetser, 1922 National Champion, required 301 strokes and got a silver mashie. Champion Max Marston, 305, got nothing. Jess Guilford, 1921 National Champion, was handed a silver golf ball for scoring a 73, best 18 holes for the weekend. Last year Mr. Tailer handed Guilford a golden mashie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Other Golf | 9/15/1924 | See Source »

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