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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 #2,301 to #2,350.
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- Fred Sington was a big fast sports star at Birmingham's Phillips High School in 1925. (Q14528)
- kind of firing the game. (Q14527)
- five yards so we'd lost two yards or whatever he'd moved everything on the on the screen that he had up there and that made us feel like we were (Q14526)
- I guess you call it and he never had hold back phone up and he'd just matheney have the ticker tape thing going anywhere when he moved like we'd gained (Q14525)
- An answer would get to play play by play on ticker tape. (Q14524)
- Found the stage they had looked like just like a football field and the. (Q14523)
- They strung up a special Telegraph wire from the advertiser offices and the play by play was flashed in over the AP wire. (Q14522)
- which was the finest theater in downtown Montgomery for one of these matinees. (Q14521)
- People gathered in Montgomery, the advertiser rented out the Grand Theater, (Q14520)
- Any place that was big enough to hold 100 people and they could string up a Telegraph wire. (Q14519)
- The only way technology could provide it. (Q14518)
- Back in the South, fans were settling in to enjoy the game. (Q14517)
- George Wilson. (Q14516)
- while the Crimson Tide spent part of the warm up pointing out the one man who could ruin the day. (Q14515)
- Don Denny and the Alabama team sponsors, (Q14514)
- During pregame, the tension show, (Q14513)
- The stadium was filled near capacity. (Q14512)
- 1926, the Rose Bowl parking lot overflowed with model Tees. (Q14511)
- By the early afternoon of January 1st, (Q14510)
- Transitional segment 29 (Q14509)
- This is just like Gettysburg now we've got one more chance for Southerners to show them what we're made of. (Q14508)
- When what you're really thinking is this is just like Chancellorsville. (Q14507)
- but we're going anyway, just to try to give us a good account of ourselves as we possibly can't. (Q14506)
- What's the point in the US even going out there, (Q14505)
- we don't have any chance. (Q14504)
- So you say well, heck no, (Q14503)
- Everyone says you don't have a chance. (Q14502)
- Transitional segment 28 (Q14501)
- and they didn't know it. (Q14500)
- Champ knew that, but he was counting on the players not knowing it, (Q14499)
- They weren't even in the Civil War. (Q14498)
- They had been fighting Indians during the Civil War. (Q14497)
- And of course, the ancestors of the people from Washington. (Q14496)
- you know, will destroy those damn Yankees you know. (Q14495)
- So Alabama players some as they ran out on the field, (Q14494)
- They had to avenge. Losing the Civil War by meeting these these Washington Yankees. (Q14493)
- The Confederacy was on their shoulders. (Q14492)
- And told him to send telegrams out to the Alabama players that they honor. (Q14491)
- Any wire at all the presidents of the civic clubs in Tuscaloosa. (Q14490)
- So Champ was out there in California for that Rose Bowl game. (Q14489)
- The South would rise again. (Q14488)
- But Alabama's diehard promoter Champ Pickens chomped on his cigar and boldly told anyone who would listen. (Q14487)
- would blow the Crimson Tide back across the continent as a pale pink stream. (Q14486)
- another said. The Huskies, also known as the Purple Tornado, (Q14485)
- As Game Day approach, one writer picked Washington to win by 51 points, (Q14484)
- in my opinion, sort of reliving the sectionalism of 100 years of competition between North and South. (Q14483)
- they are the South football team and they are actually, (Q14482)
- they're not just the University of Alabama football team, (Q14481)
- By the time they get there, (Q14480)
- very hard practices. (Q14479)