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This page lists pages with no connected data item (in namespaces that support connected items). The list is sorted by descending page ID, so that newer pages are listed first.
Showing below up to 50 results in range #2,001 to #2,050.
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- The South had a heart and a tradition, (Q14828)
- all the loss causes and sacrificing's in vain. (Q14827)
- For all the last stands, (Q14826)
- looked back at the cultural impact of Alabama's early Rose Bowl appearances and wrote this in 1941. (Q14825)
- John Temple Graves, a Birmingham newspaper editor, (Q14824)
- Transitional segment 49 (Q14823)
- And physical commitment to something else. (Q14822)
- It would have invested this kind of emotional energy. (Q14821)
- I think, is the South would have found some other way to excel. (Q14820)
- And what would have happened, (Q14819)
- it would not have, because the South would have just been proved yet again to be inferior in some other dimension of life. (Q14818)
- And my answer to that is no, (Q14817)
- would football then have become the sort of important defining experience for Southerners that it is going to come over the next five decades? (Q14816)
- Suppose they had been defeated by 40 points, (Q14815)
- Suppose Alabama had Lossed badly in 1926. (Q14814)
- What we need to do is ask ourselves a kind of interesting philosophical question. (Q14813)
- Transitional segment 48 (Q14812)
- That rule Southern football. The Alabama Crimson Tide. (Q14811)
- ready to play for the team. (Q14810)
- Five years later, Paul Bear Bryant would be in Tuscaloosa, (Q14809)
- He was quickly recruited, although he had never played the game. (Q14808)
- youngster happened upon the field where the Fordyce Arkansas High School team was practicing. (Q14807)
- In the autumn after the Great Rose Bowl victory of 1926 and overgrown 8th grade, (Q14806)
- Transitional segment 47 (Q14805)
- I still love it. (Q14804)
- So I love that man. (Q14803)
- I'd go and hug him and kiss me. (Q14802)
- Johnny said. If he walked in that door right now, (Q14801)
- Johnny said, I'll tell you this, (Q14800)
- 10 He was a John Hauser, (Q14799)
- but I'll tell you, this Johnny. (Q14798)
- but and he said, tears came in and tears came in his eyes and he said, (Q14797)
- well, he said, I guess it's been 11 or 12 years since I've seen poorly, (Q14796)
- Time, Johnny got count of a faraway look in his eye and he said, (Q14795)
- who I think was in living in Virginia. (Q14794)
- how long has it been since you've seen Puta, (Q14793)
- So I asked him. I said well, (Q14792)
- Yet they would always share that moment in football history. (Q14791)
- Their personalities were as different as the way they played the game. (Q14790)
- they rarely saw each other. (Q14789)
- After Johnny Mac Brown and Pooley Hubert parted in 1926, (Q14788)
- Transitional segment 46 (Q14787)
- Hubert Swainsboro High School teams won several regional titles and he was named coach of the Year in Georgia. (Q14786)
- he moved in and installed the old single wing. (Q14785)
- But in the 1950s, when he saw a poorly coached local high school team, (Q14784)
- then retired to Waynesboro, GA to raise Peach is. (Q14783)
- After a pro career, Pooley Hubert coached at Southern Mississippi and Virginia Military Institute, (Q14782)
- Absolutely. (Q14781)
- I can still remember sitting in the old Druid Theater in Tuscaloosa crying. (Q14780)
- I think maybe he got killed or something. (Q14779)