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OPEN DAILY
9 a.m. - 4 p.m.
5/21/1960
Charley Boswell is featured on the NBC Show This is Your Life hosted by Ralph Edwards. Among those on hand to help Boswell remember his moments growing up in Ensley, his athletic days at Alabama and his World War II hero days, is famous entertainer Bob Hope. Boswell, who was blinded during the war, donates his monies from the show to his favorite charity, "The Alabama Sight Conservation Association." |
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Coach: Wallace Wade (Brown) Record: 7-2-1
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click game date for
details
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September 29, 1923 |
Union |
12-0 |
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October 6, 1923 |
Mississippi |
56-0 |
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October 13, 1923 |
Syracuse |
0-23 |
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October 20, 1923 |
Sewanee |
7-0 |
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October 27, 1923 |
Spring Hill |
59-0 |
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November 3, 1923 |
Georgia Tech |
0-0 |
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November 10, 1923 |
Kentucky |
16-8 |
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November 16, 1923 |
LSU |
30-3 |
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November 24, 1923 |
Georgia |
36-0 |
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November 29, 1923 |
Florida |
6-16 |
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Captain(s): Al Clemens
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Wallace Wade, an iron disciplinarian, arrived in Tuscaloosa from his assistant's job at Vanderbilt, taking over for the popular Xen C. Scott, a man forced to relinquish his position due to a fatal bout with cancer.
Although a native of Tennessee, Wade had matriculated at Brown where he had played football and competed in the 1916 Rose Row. His first year produced a 7-2-1 squad, one which ventured to Syracuse, N.Y., to play in a 23-0 losing cause to the Orangemen, a loss Wade would claim would teach him more about football than any other game he coached in his illustrious career. End Al Clemens, also captain of the squad, and quarterback Grant Gillis earned All-Southern Conference tributes. |
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Notes: Al Clemens is a captain under two different coaches - Xen Scott and Wallace Wade. |
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