Word: ticknor
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Hagner, Jr. '31, of Wilmington, Del; and W. D. Ticknor, Jr. '30, of New York, N. Y. also received the S.B. degree. E. C. Sibley '27, of Kirkwood, Mo., received S.B. cum laude...
...Ticknor 1G.B., who captained the 1930 Harvard football team, and who was assistant line coach last fall on the staff of Head Coach E. L. Casey '17, has retired from his position in order to enter business...
...retiring football center coach, who is now in the first year class at the Business School, will probably not finish the regular course, but will take a few incidental courses to complete training before entering business. Ticknor for three years was center on the University football team, was captain in his last year at Harvard, and during the last two years of University football was selected as All-American center. During the three years in which Ticknor filled a position on the Harvard gridiron machine, each season in turn was climaxed by a victory over Yale...
...been announced who will take the place of the former Harvard captain on Casey's coaching staff, where the All-American center was an assistant to line coach Walter Cleary. Ticknor leaves the Harvard eleven after one season of teaching football. During that time R. H. Hallowell '33, last year's first string pivot man, was developed into a center of the first rank. Two other men who came under the eyes of the former Harvard leader are W. A. Casey '34, and F. J. Crane '34, two members of the Sophomore class from whom much work in the center...
...Wood is tall (6 ft. 1 in.), slim (173 lb.), a Phi Beta Kappa. He has dark hair, dark eyes, looks like his father, a Harvard 1902 Boston cotton broker and Harvard trustee who likes squash, tennis, golf. Like many of Harvard's famed athletes-Ben and Bill Ticknor, Charlie Cunningham, recent Hallowells and Saltonstalls-Barry Wood was schooled at Milton, where his football coach was onetime Harvard Quarterback Charlie Buell. A year out West made him rugged enough for college football, which he says he plays because enough hard exercise makes it easier to study. Other games which...