. Argo . TZLER, II. D. Rudolph,F. J. Sewall,F. F. Stewart,J. R. Wright,R. A. Warren. McCown Club •RANK BACHOP, i. R. Fulton,. B. Fulton,red. C. Houston,.. i!. Moore, A. AF McClurg,C. M. McXary, J as. G. Patterson,J. A. Smith, B. A. Zuver. 6-1 Van Orsdell Club J. Allen Hark, A. McLachlan, L. G. Bennett, Jno. G. McKay, Frank W. Christie, W. M. Orr, G. L. Cochran, G. M. Pierce, Milo W. Cox, Jas. A. Stranahan, W. R. Davis, J. Frank Shrader, W. V. Irons, J. S. Tannehill, J. L. Leach, N. A. Tannehill, W. L. Marks, Howard H. Metz, Venable Club J. WlLLARD ACHESON, Paul L. Andrews,Walter E. Bro
. Argo . TZLER, II. D. Rudolph,F. J. Sewall,F. F. Stewart,J. R. Wright,R. A. Warren. McCown Club •RANK BACHOP, i. R. Fulton,. B. Fulton,red. C. Houston,.. i!. Moore, A. AF McClurg,C. M. McXary, J as. G. Patterson,J. A. Smith, B. A. Zuver. 6-1 Van Orsdell Club J. Allen Hark, A. McLachlan, L. G. Bennett, Jno. G. McKay, Frank W. Christie, W. M. Orr, G. L. Cochran, G. M. Pierce, Milo W. Cox, Jas. A. Stranahan, W. R. Davis, J. Frank Shrader, W. V. Irons, J. S. Tannehill, J. L. Leach, N. A. Tannehill, W. L. Marks, Howard H. Metz, Venable Club J. WlLLARD ACHESON, Paul L. Andrews,Walter E. Brown,S. Ernest Calhoun,Harry A. Cannon,Chas. F. Clltter,Pal l G. Dick,William J. Everhart,Will. E. Feldstein,Glide C. Hartford, S. Martin Jamison,Ben. F. Laughlin,Geo. A. Lewis,J. Howard McBane,Karl M. Miller,David I. Rose,A. Halden Scott,Clark C. Vance,John O. Welch. Wilson Club Wade Alter. F. M. Reno, Jas. Dougherty, C. H. Rex, II. K. Hartsuff, , Dale Mc Masters, W. F. B. Mitchell, 65. Foot Ball I |OLLEGE opened in the fall of 1904, with athletic circles in a stale of I J anxious expectancy — half of hope and half of fear. The board haV- IPjQ&fj ing withdrawn its support of the foot ball team, a mass meeting washeld, at which the needed money was pledged by voluntary subscrip-tion, and Roy W. Hayes, late of W. and J., was chosen coach. Pop arrived the following Mondav, and then things began to came out by the score, until it was impossible to furnish them abundance and variety of material certainly should have satisfied the mostexacting. There were veteran back field men of years experience, big lines-men who had never seen a pigskin kicked, and verdant freshmen who avowedtheir intention of trying for hump-back. The high pitch of interest shownat the opening of the season never died out, and even in the stormiest weather,when practice time came, the sidelines would be black with students who cheeredtheir team with song and yell.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidargo1906west, bookyear1906