July 11, 2009 by collectableivy
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June 17, 2009 by collectableivy

There is no way he could have actually kicked the ball given his stance and where his leg is positioned. The most surprised person in the stadium is the kicker based on the expression on his face, “you mean I actually kicked the ball?”
He was so confused he forgot to put his helmet on.
One of the more desirable and collectible Harvard Yale Programs.
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May 14, 2009 by collectableivy
John Held, Jr was the preeminent artist of the Jazz Age who was widely published in the New Yorker, Harper’s Bazaar, Life Magazine and Vanity Fair. Held was famous for his depiction of the popular Roaring Twenties dance ‘The Charleston’ and his depictions of college-age women and in particular “the flapper”.

Held’s images were done in an angular stype. His scantily clad flapper was accepted by scandalized elders as the prototype of modern youth, the symbol of our moral revolution….Week after week in Life and Judge and College Humor, they danced the Charleston with ropes and beads swinging and bracets clanking and legs kicking at right angles…
A Yale Princeton Program from 1927, cover design by John Held, Jr.
Held lived for a long time near Yale in Westport, Connecticut. He was also known for infusing his works with a sense of humor, which is evident in the Yale v. Princeton program he did for Yale in 1927 with his depiction of a Chinese football player being cheered on by Yale and Princeton fans.

Harvard v. Yale Program 1928
Held was also known for his maps/illustrations including the one in the Harvard/Yale Program above. He also did illustrations on Trout Fishing, Winter Sports, Americana, The Sportsman’s Map of Florida, Saratoga Springs.

Many of Held’s illustrations featured his unique sense of humor and buxom women or people living the life of sin:

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May 8, 2009 by collectableivy
Same game, different program covers.
The 1913 meeting between Stanford and the University of California at Berkeley (Cal), was held on Stanford Field on November 8, 1913. This was a unique game in several respects. First, it was played under “Rugby” rules, which Stanford and Cal did for a multi-year period around World War I.
Second, the program was printed with two different covers. Possibly, depending upon what team you were rooting for: Indian fans got the red big “S” program and Golden Bear Fans got the blue “C” program?


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April 30, 2009 by collectableivy
See this imaginative program from the 1941 Harvard v. Dartmouth Game played at Harvard that year. The program cover can be held so as to please the fans of both teams. Held upright it shows the Dartmouth Indian on the right.

Flip the program over and the Harvard mascot is facing the appropriate way on the right side of the program.

The program cover was done by longtime Harvard program illustrator A.B. Savrann.
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April 1, 2009 by collectableivy
Donald Rumsfeld as a footballer?
Indeed. Before he would go on to fame (or infamy depending on your political point of view), Donald Rumsfeld was featured in an Ivy League Football Program.
The 1967 University of Pennslyvania v. Princeton Program coinidently happens to have one of our favorite covers on it, featuring the Princeton Tiger mascot holding up a box of Quaker Oats with the face of the Penn mascot of Ben Franklin.

The program also features a two page write-up detailing the career of then Congressman Donald Rumsfeld (Princeton ‘54). The 35 year old congressman looks clean-cut as you would expect. Rumsfeld was then in his third term as a congressman from “Illinois’ fashionable North Shore”.

Rummy was the captain of the Tiger 150-pound football team (read: lightweight) and of the wrestling team as a senior. Since the lightweight team and the wrestling team didn’t publish programs, this is a rare feature having the future Defense Secretary appear in a program.
Prior to serving as a congressman he served as a Flight Instructor in the Navy, an organization he described as “the most important entity in the world today”. You can see even then, Don was quite modest!
He goes on to be quoted in the program as saying “I have great interest in Congress as an instrument of government”, which is ironic since he would go on to ignore that particular branch of government while Defense Secretary.
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