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Word: andrews (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

While Holcombe was sympathizing with the Yale debaters he felt had been "gyped", the three judges had all concurred against the Elis. They were all Boston lawyers, J. Robert Ayers, Andrew L. Moore and Walter G. Wehrle...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEBATERS SWEEP MATCHES AGAINST YALE, PRINCETON | 4/24/1937 | See Source »

...Dartmouth was third in 42.1; Dave Bradley of Dartmouth fourth, 43.1. The fourteen Harvard men besides Rogers, whose times were counted in the team score, placed as follows: H. Adams Carter '36, fifth, 43.9; David Emerson '38, sixth, 44.8; Charles Lawrence, eighth, 46.4; Albert F. Sise, tenth, 47.6; Andrew E. Ritchie, Jr. '34, twelth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ski Team Defeats Dartmouth Scoring Major Slalom Upset | 4/20/1937 | See Source »

Robert H. Shaw '37, fourteenth, 48.1; Strafford Wentworth '36, fifteenth, 48.4; Thomas B. Walsh '25, seventeenth, 50.0; David H. Lawrence '40, nineteenth, 50.6; R. Colin MacLaurin '38, twenty-first, 53.0; Andrew Marshall, Jr. '34, twenty-third, 53.4; Samuel Wakeman, twenty-fourth, 53.6; Wendell M. Hastings '35, twenty-fifth, 54.0; Hubert D. Kernan, Jr., twenty-seventh...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ski Team Defeats Dartmouth Scoring Major Slalom Upset | 4/20/1937 | See Source »

Major explanation of the phenomenon of Robert William Feller is his father, William Andrew Feller of Van Meter, Iowa (pop. 410). Frustrated in his own ambition to be a professional baseballer, Father Feller decided to realize it vicariously in his son. When Robert Feller was four, he and his father played catch behind the barn on the 360-acre Feller wheat farm. At 9, Robert Feller could throw a baseball 275 ft. At 13 he could do better than 350 ft.* At 14, he could pitch so fast that his father had a hard time catching the ball and once...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Baseball: New Season | 4/19/1937 | See Source »

...forested in Corinthian columns and paved with miles of linoleum, has been completed for the most part within the past four years, citizens are apt to think that New Washington is largely a New Deal development. It is nothing of the sort. New Washington was the pet scheme of Andrew W. Mellon. The new Department of the Interior building, into which Secretary Ickes moved last week, is the only one of the new Federal buildings designed under the New Deal. The favorite architect of Mr. Mellon's city planners was the late Cass Gilbert (Woolworth Building), who died...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Basin Battle | 4/19/1937 | See Source »

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