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Topic: Harry Jacunski


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In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
  Harry Jacunski - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harry Jacunski was an NFL player and college coach for over 40 years.
Jacunski was an All-state center on the New Britain High School 1934 basketball team and played football with Vince Lombardi at Fordham University, where Jacunski was one of Fordham’s "Seven Blocks of Granite".
Jacunski was inducted into both the Fordham and Green Bay Hall of Fame.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Harry_Jacunski   (187 words)

  
 Harry - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harry Bannink – Dutch composer, arranger and pianist
Harry H Corbett - not to be confused with the puppeteer, this actor was famous as Harold in the British sitcom Steptoe and Son
Harry Magdoff and espionage – discussion of the role of Harry Magdoff in espionage activities
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Harry   (3370 words)

  
 JS Online:Former Packers end Jacunski dies
Jacunski was inducted into the Packer Hall of Fame in 1991.
Jacunski played in college at Fordham and was a reserve lineman behind the "Seven Blocks of Granite," who included future Packers coach Vince Lombardi.
Jacunski joined the coaching staff at Yale in 1948 and served as a position coach and as head coach of the freshman squad.
www.jsonline.com /story/index.aspx?id=120209&format=print   (205 words)

  
 JS Online:Packers Flashback
Jacunski spelled one of the starting ends on "The Seven Blocks of Granite," the famous line at Fordham on which Lombardi was a starting guard.
Jacunski was a member of two of the Packers' NFL championship teams, in his first year and his last.
Jacunski, 86, is retired and living in Wallingford, Conn., outside New Haven.
www.jsonline.com /story/index.aspx?id=3844&format=print   (688 words)

  
 Yale Daily News - Eli mentor Jacunski dies at 87
Harry Jacunski, a major cog in the Yale football machine through the mid-20th century, died of heart failure Feb. 20 at Connecticut Hospice in Branford.
Jacunski was eventually elected to both the Fordham and Green Bay Halls of Fame.
Jacunski is survived by his twin sons, Richard Jacunski of Brooklyn and Robert Jacunski of Wallingford, and his remaining two daughters, Carol of Exeter and Margaret of Norristown, Pa. Jacunski also left behind 14 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.
www.yaledailynews.com /article.asp?AID=22173   (921 words)

  
 Harry Jacunski   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Harry Jacunski was an NFL player and college coach for over years.
Jacunski was an All-state center on the Britain High School 1934 basketball team and played football with Vince Lombardi at Fordham University where Jacunski was one of the "Seven Blocks of Granite".
Jacunski was inducted into both the and Green Bay Hall of Fame.
www.freeglossary.com /Harry_Jacunski   (559 words)

  
 Daily Sports Capsule: 2/22/03
Harry Jacunski, former Green Bay Packer lineman and assistant coach at Yale, has died.
Jacunski died Thursday at the Connecticut Hospice in Branford.
Jacunski played six seasons at Green Bay as a defensive end and was on the 1939 and 1944 NFL champion teams.
www.southcoasttoday.com /daily/02-03/02-22-03/zzzspcap.htm   (688 words)

  
 Packers.com » News » Stories » 2005 » 06 » 30 » 1
Harry Jacunski was signed by the Packers as a free agent in 1939 and enjoyed a six-year career in Green Bay, helping the Green and Gold win two NFL championships -- as a rookie in '39 and in 1944, his sixth and final season.
Jacunski caught 52 passes for 985 yards, an 18.9-yard average, and scored 36 points on six touchdowns over his Packers career.
Harry wore jersey number 48 throughout his playing career, becoming only the fourth player in team history to wear it, following Pro Hall of Famer Clarke Hinkle (1934), Frank Butler (1935-36) and Dokie Miller (1938).
www.packers.com /news/stories/2005/06/30/1/index.phtml?printable=1   (1752 words)

  
 The Harvard Crimson :: News :: Erstwhile Green Bay End Jacunski Scouts and Coaches for the Crimson
Harry says seeing the Yale game last year was a real treat for him.
With Hutson in his prime, things looked hopeless for Harry, but then starting right end Milt Gantenbein retired to a more quiet life and Jacunski was shifted to fill the hole.
Harry claims he resents being called a "defensive" end, but at the same time boasts the Packers' 16 to 14 win over the favored Chicago Bears in 1941 as his most exciting game.
www.thecrimson.com /printerfriendly.aspx?ref=472398   (740 words)

  
 NFL.com - Green Bay Packers Team News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
WALLINGFORD, Conn. (Feb. 21, 2003) -- Harry Jacunski, former Green Bay Packers lineman and assistant coach at Yale, has died.
Throughout his retirement, Jacunski stayed in touch with many of his former players.
Jacunski is survived by two sons, two daughters, 14 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.
www.nfl.com /teams/story/GB/6203258   (319 words)

  
 February 2003
Wrote another, "One of my favorite Harry stories is after beating Princeton on the last play of the game and kneeling on the extra point, Harry's first words to me were, 'O'B, why didn't you stick it to them?' That's when I realized the rivalry was something more than special.
Harry called us together, not to talk about sportsmanship, but - somewhat in disbelief that he would even have to tell us - to tell us that if you were going to hit somebody in the head with your bare hand, you should rip his helmet off first!
Coach Jacunski became that invaluable man that every staff should have - the coach who stays on, from one staff to the next, maintaining continuity, helping the current football program keep its ties with the past.
www.coachwyatt.com /Feb03.html   (15342 words)

  
 Life In Legacy - Week of 02/22/2003   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Chardonnay - 14-year-old Bichon Frise dog owned by Kathy Lee and Frank Gifford, who was in the back yard of the Gifford home on Jan. 28, and was attacked and killed by a coyote, a growing problem in the Riverside, Connecticut suburb where the Gifford’s live.
Noriko Bridges Flynn - Civil rights worker who with her first husband Marxist leader Harry Bridges, worked for union rights, fair treatment of immigrants and racial and sexual equality, and who married Ed Flynn, one of her husband’s staunchest opponents, after Bridges death, died Feb. 7 in Pescadero, CA at age 79.
Herman Hudson - Educator who was a pioneer in programs for African-American college students and who founded the National Council for Black Studies in the 1970’s, died Feb 18 of heart problems in Southfield, MI at age 80.
www.lifeinlegacy.com /2003/WIR20030222.html   (1932 words)

  
 This Name Should Ring a Bell :: Looking Back on the Career of Fritz Barzilauskas '48
For years he was line coach for Yale's freshman team and scouted forthcoming opponents.
Those were fun times around the football training table in Ray Tompkins House, and a lot of the fun revolved around Barzilauskas and Harry Jacunski, the end coach.
The two would travel to scout Navy or Cornell or Temple or whomever Yale was playing next, and together they represented more than a quarter-ton of football savvy.
yalebulldogs.cstv.com /sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/110703aab.html   (1017 words)

  
 The Middletown Press - State has some interesting high school football spots
From Sage Park it’s barely 4 miles to Veterans Memorial Stadium in New Britain, arguably this state’s football capital.
Consider the tradition: New Britain is the birthplace of Walter Camp, father of American football; Harry Jacunski, who’s in the Green Bay Packer Hall of Fame; and Tebucky Jones, a first-round NFL draft pick by the New England Patriots in 1998.
And now New Britain High can boast of Jack Cochran and the state’s largest high school coaching staff, and of teams that ruled every statewide poll in 2001 and 2003.
www.zwire.com /site/news.cfm?newsid=12952022&BRD=1645&PAG=461&dept_id=17758&rfi=6   (2680 words)

  
 Professional Football Researchers Association- Pro Football History
To this Hinkle adds: "Milt Gantenbein was the best blocking end who ever lived."
The subs were such talented players as Tiny Engebretsen and Pete Tinsley guards, tackle Ernie Smith, and end Harry Jacunski.
The type of deceptive receiver Don Hutson was is related by Col. Dwight Sloan, a famous passer who played defense against Don.
www.footballresearch.com /articles/frpage.cfm?topic=grnb-39   (826 words)

  
 ADDRESSES: FOOTBALL A-M @ homeaddress.bravehost.com - A Bravenet.com Hosted Site   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Harry Carson - 732 Barrister Ct. Franklin Lakes, NJ 07417
Harry Gilmer - 7467 Highway N, Fallon, MO 63366
Harry Jacunski - 2123 Ashlar Vig Wallingford Ct 06492
www.homeaddress.bravehost.com /football.html   (6464 words)

  
 Football Cards :: Tradesite
1949 11 103 Harry Larche T Arkansas State
1950 8 95 Harry Szulborski B Purdue 1948 Leaf 41
1958 14 158 Harry Hauffe T South Dakota
www.freewebs.com /traceyschindler/packerwantlist.htm   (5051 words)

  
 New York Times: February 2003
Harry Jacunski, 87, One of Fordham's Seven Blocks of Granite, Dies (By WILLIAM N. WALLACE, Feb. 22, 2003)
On This Day: February 21 (Antonio Lopez Santa Anna 2/21/1794-6/21/1876, John Henry Newman 2/21/1801-8/11/1890, Pierre Laffitte 2/21/1823-1/4/1903, Leo Delibes 2/21/1836-1/16/1891, Constantin Brancusi 2/21/1876-3/16/1957, Harry Stack Sullivan 2/21/1892-1/14/1949, Anais Nin 2/21/1903-1/14/1977, Tom Yawkey 2/21/1903-7/9/1976, W. Auden 2/21/1907-9/29/1973, Kelsey Grammer 1955, Mary Chapin Carpenter 1958, Christopher Atkins 1961, William Baldwin 1963, Jennifer Love Hewitt 1979)
BUSINESS TRAVEL: Offsetting Environmental Damage by Planes (By HARRY RIJNEN, Feb. 18, 2003)
www.wisdomportal.com /NYTimes-Feb2003.html   (12069 words)

  
 Connecticut SportsWriters Alliance
Tom Callaghan, Windham High School coach; Jess Dow, Southern Connecticut State College coach; H.H. Mandly Jr., state amateur golf champion.
Ralph Erickson, Loomis School athletic director; Harry Jacunski, Yale freshman football coach; Smokey Joe Wood, Boston Red Sox pitcher and Yale baseball coach.
Joe Fontana, Southington High athletic director; John Kelley, marathon runner; Murray Murdoch, Yale hockey coach.
www.ctsportswriters.org /honorroll.html   (2323 words)

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