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  1. was a feisty Southerner known at Brown as Wally Wade. (Q14309)
  2. Blocking for Pollard at right guard, (Q14308)
  3. Named to the All American team. (Q14307)
  4. led Brown University to the Rose Bowl and became the first man of his race. (Q14306)
  5. Back in 1915, a Chicago born African American running back named Fritz Pollard, (Q14305)
  6. don't bring your black players. (Q14304)
  7. It was even more of a problem when the Northern teams scheme South and the rule of Thumb was if you come South, (Q14303)
  8. Curiously enough, some did, some refused. (Q14302)
  9. They don't know whether to play them or not play them. (Q14301)
  10. So as you get African American athletes on teams alot of Southern teams don't know what to do. (Q14300)
  11. Northern teams like Dartmouth, Northwestern and Rutgers often featured talented African Americans at key positions. (Q14299)
  12. Still there were a few exceptions. (Q14298)
  13. football was a sport for white players only. (Q14297)
  14. At nearly every major college across the country, (Q14296)
  15. Transitional segment 16 (Q14295)
  16. going to be to be a big Hollywood star someday. (Q14294)
  17. One of his teammates tells an anecdote about his standing in front of the mirror and combing his combing his hair back and talking about how much fun it was (Q14293)
  18. was a transforming smile. Apparently drama was was something that engaged a lot of his time. (Q14292)
  19. He had an absolutely glorious smile, (Q14291)
  20. If you can believe that now. (Q14290)
  21. His whole body would be out of the sideline over the sign on his feet inside. (Q14289)
  22. I'm diving him and wouldn't even touch his body. (Q14288)
  23. You wouldn't even believe I have seen him run down that sideline and boys coming straight up to sign. (Q14287)
  24. recalled his running style. I can tell you something about him. (Q14286)
  25. Grant Giles, who played quarter and half back alongside Brown, (Q14285)
  26. Ann Brown was running wild scoring twelve touchdowns. (Q14284)
  27. By 1924, Alabama was huddling up. (Q14283)
  28. Coach Wade in fact, had to install the huddle system for Johnny's benefit champ Pickens. (Q14282)
  29. The players called him dumb dumb because he had a hard time remembering the football plays. (Q14281)
  30. He had a terrible memory. (Q14280)
  31. Aside from being a poor tackler. (Q14279)
  32. Brown played little his first two years at Alabama. (Q14278)
  33. Although a deceptive runner and dangerous receiver, (Q14277)
  34. AL. Johnny and his five brothers would pound nails and some of the shoes his father sold for a living and play tackle football and neighborhood fields. (Q14276)
  35. He was the speedster. The gamebreaker Brown grew up one of nine children in a close knit family in Dothan, (Q14275)
  36. hard nosed player, Johnny Mack Brown made the game look easy. (Q14274)
  37. While Hubert was the epitome of the gritty, (Q14273)
  38. He told you what you gonna do and if you didn't do it rhyme or putting somebody else in your spot. (Q14272)
  39. When you got in the huddle with poorly Hubert. (Q14271)
  40. There's no quarterback in football history that ran a team with more authority than Pooley Hubert did. (Q14270)
  41. His teammates called him Papa Pooley. (Q14269)
  42. He looked and acted even older. (Q14268)
  43. One year later, a 21 year old freshman started taking command of Alabama's football fortunes. (Q14267)
  44. He spent the fall working out with the scrub teams. (Q14266)
  45. His last stop was Tuscalusa. (Q14265)
  46. searching for a team, but the season had already begun. (Q14264)
  47. Hubert rode the rails through the South, (Q14263)
  48. The professors he felt like we're all atheists and he won't go stay there. (Q14262)
  49. All Yankees and. (Q14261)
  50. Transitional segment 15 (Q14260)

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