Word: bows
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Crew C followed crew B across the line at a disadvantage of half a length, with crews F and E only a few feel behind. There was a little open water between the stern of crew E and the how of crew E and the bow of crew D, the last of the six shells to cross the finish line...
Crew H. Stroke, J. M. Byrne; 4, R. I. McKesson; 6, B. S. Clark; 5, A. S. Pigeon; 4, Z. B. Adams Jr., 3, C. D. Breek inridge; 2, R. G. Fisher, bow, Brooks...
Crew B Stroke, J. W. Fox; 7, Rogers; 6, A. G. Bullock; 5, R. C. Timpson; 4, G. T. Emmett, 3, A. W. Williams; 2, G. L. bow Jr., bow, F. W. Stetson...
...therefore, the objector may well confine himself; it betrays a sufficient number of facts for discussion; on it alone may a solid case be built. Does inviolate tradition condone all? Does an air of the sacrosanct vindicate every blemish on the tabernacle? The reply is obviously one which must bow to the canons of good taste. Until the daily vaudeville ceases the public will be expected to stop, to stare, perhaps to snicker in adolescent fashion. But the public stops not to be entertained--these diversions have no relation to the word--but rather in amazement. In the haunts...
...last quality expected from the Chicago Tribune is subtlety. Therefore its dictum on Harvard and Yale--that "now they are nothing more than institutions of learning"--may be accepted not as a graceful and suave bow to two great universities but as an evidence of bovine condolence. Each having lost a football game Harvard and Yale are out of the calcium until the 1928 gridiron season. They may remain huddled in their eastern reaches while the Big Ten fights its giant's battle. Life will go on life is like that--but Harvard and Yale are through...