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George Everett Strupper Jr. (July 26, 1896 –
February 4, 1950),
known variously as "Ev" or "Strup" or "Stroop" was an
American football player. He pla****...
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Halfback Everett Strupper joined the team in 1915 and was
partially deaf. He
called the
signals instead of the quarterback. When
Strupper tried out for the...
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scored the second-most
points in the nation,
behind Georgetown.
Everett Strupper was
third in the
nation in scoring,
including 16 touchdowns.
Several players...
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National Championship Foundation. The
backfield of
Albert Hill,
Everett Strupper, Joe Guyon, and Judy
Harlan led the
Golden Tornado, and all four rushed...
- Alabama. On
October 8, 1930, a
sportswriter for the
Atlanta Journal,
Everett Strupper,
wrote about the
previous w****end's Alabama-Ole Miss
football game. He...
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South selected first-team All-American in
Walker Carpenter and
Everett Strupper. Pop Warner's
Pittsburgh Panthers were also undefeated, but
declined a...
- as are pla**** in baseball. Jemison, **** (December 9, 1917). "Everett
Strupper Elected To Lead 1918 Tech Eleven". The
Atlanta Constitution.
Archived from...
- w**** of play,
Georgia Tech beat Penn 41–0.
Bernie McCarty called it "
Strupper's finest hour,
coming through against powerful Penn in the
contest that...
- Tech won its
first national championship behind the
backfield of
Everett Strupper, Joe Guyon, Al Hill, and Judy Harlan. It was the
first national title for...
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Fielder was
later a
prominent figure in
World War II. New
halfback Everett Strupper was
partially deaf;
because of his deafness, he
called the
signals when...