Frank Horgan was a member of Alpha Lambda and the Letter Society. He graduated in 1931 in Liberal Arts. He played both baseball and football for the then Gray Fog.
Every Gray Fog man was in on every play in the St. Mary's game, but Frank Horgan at quarter proved himself one of the best field generals in the business. Horgan took desperate means to gain yardage and succeeded in mixing up plays with so much ginger that the Gaels were properly spiced for some time. The first tally was the result of two passes to Frank Horgan in the first quarter. The first throw netted 35 yards and landed the ball 20 yards from the goal. Two more plays sent Horgan free into the end zone where he nabbed Kleckner's throw with a beautiful catch (TheFoghorn).
Baseball is one game where a big, husky, awkward boy with a stick in his hand is as dangerous as the next fellow. Grace of motion is not everything. The kid that has to tie himself into knots even to get the bat on his shoulder is always likely to kiss one for keeps. Frank Horgan has finally sunned the hitch out of his throwing arm and the Fog inner defense is now as smooth as can be. With Gene Sullivan and Frank as the keystone combine, a basehit over second has to be a thoroughbred sock (TheFoghorn).
Â