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Word: connors (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Others to take second places were Carlisle Abell '35, J. E. Rogerson '34, Lambert Murphy '35, and J. E. O'Connor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CALVIN AND HAYES ARE HANDICAP MEET WINNERS | 10/29/1932 | See Source »

...yard dash-won by E. E. Calvin '35; second, J. F. O'Connor '35; third J. M. Morse '34. Time...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CALVIN AND HAYES ARE HANDICAP MEET WINNERS | 10/29/1932 | See Source »

...Charles XII Charles Edwin Carr Urry's Chaucer Philippe Dur Defee: Robinson Crusoe Maurice Franks Frost's Poems George Lee Haskins Everybody's Pepys John Joseph Hession Lowes: Road to Xanadu Robert Kramer Morison: Development of Harvard University Donald Vincent McGranahan Oxford Book of English Verse Thomas Burton O'Connor Thomson's Poems Leonard Raum Chesterfield's Letters to his Son Herbert Ellis Robbins Everybody's Boswell Edwin Marion Snell Johnson's Lives of the Poets Robert Wetmore Stoughton Shelley's Poems Arthur Wingate Todd Lemaitre: On the Margins of Old Books

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Recipients of Detur Awards | 10/29/1932 | See Source »

Last week Major-General William D. Connor, superintendent at West Point, and Rear Admiral Thomas C. Hart, superintendent at Annapolis, conferred in Philadelphia and came to a three-year agreement. Said they: "Faced with a situation under which post-season football games are repeatedly played very late in the season, to the detriment of academic work at both institutions, the Military and Naval Academies have decided to arrange a three-year series of athletic contests. The arrangement is made without change in existing policies, under which each institution fixes its own eligibility rules. . . . The first contest of the series will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Reconciliation | 9/12/1932 | See Source »

...themselves $1 out of every $2 deposited. Chief associates in the mismanagement were Banker Bain's two sons and his son-in-law. Bankster Bain was sentenced to the penitentiary for one to five years. Fining the sons and son-in-law $1,000 each, Judge O'Connor added: "These young men did just what I should expect. . . . They did just what their father and father-in-law told them to do." A swarm of gulled depositors and investors, expecting a stiffer sentence, muttered sullenly: "It's a shame, it's a shame.'' They...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Bankster Jailed | 9/5/1932 | See Source »

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