Word: accounts
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Brownell '30, and A. T. Gray '30 have been placed at stroke on the four eights. C. McK. Norton '29, who stroked the Junior University crew last year, has been placed at 3 on Brownell's crew for the present. He is out of action temporarily on account of illness. Of the other strokes, Watts' ability is a known quantity, and Lawrence is having his first college stroking experience, having rowed bow on the second crew last year. Brownell was at 6 on the Freshman boat after stroking one of the 1930 crews through April, and Gray rowed...
Since that time, taking into account those subscriptions made voluntarily since January 1, a total of 1,383 men have contributed $43,312. Record of the high day of the past week in point of contributors show that 265 men gave $7,125. In point of amount, the best day records a total of $8,019 from 191 men. In 1927, the largest number of contributors for a single...
...long indoor track season this winter, lengthened by two weeks on account of the Michigan games, the outdoor period has necessarily been shortened. The University and Freshman squads will have only seven weeks of running on the cinders before the Intercollegiate, and only six weeks until the Yale meet, to be held...
...have filed complaints with the Admiralty alleging that Rear Admiral Collars had grossly and persistently overstepped the bounds of his authority and shamefully browbeaten his inferiors. Pending an investigation, all three officers were suspended, last week, and ordered to hurry from Malta to London, there to give an account of their quarrel...
...story concerns a remarkably decent young Austrian officer who loses considerably more than he can pay at a game which has points of similarity, if it is not really the common variety, of Vingt-et-un. The account of his first night's gaming is the high point of the narrative. Willie is not an inveterate gambler, in fact he is naive to the point of ignorance. Temperamentally he is a graceful loser, but fundamentally he is at a loss to cope with the situation. From the general nature of Schnitzler's work, the tremendous coincidence of Fate...