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Playing number three will be Wally McDonald, followed by Tom Baker, Dudley Palmer, George Clay, John Zinsser, Freshman Dave Shepard, and Cort Parker. The tail-end spot is still very much up in the air, according to Barnaby, who said last night that he would not be surprised to see a second Freshman playing on the Varsity for the coming two matches...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SQUASH MEN TIGHTEN STRINGS FOR COMING MATCH WITH ELI | 1/27/1943 | See Source »

...been called an admirer of Fascism, was even photographed in the days before the war with the gentleman who has since become Lord Haw-Haw. He drops queer passing remarks, which smack of racism, anti-plutocratism, and other Nazi cliches. Example (explaining the Mexican War): "Since the days of Cortés and his followers the country had been largely bastardized, and the half-caste race resulting had not yet had time to form those traditions so necessary to nationhood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: For the Armchair Strategist | 11/30/1942 | See Source »

...least, runs the well-authenticated legend, well-known to Franklin Roosevelt, who slept and fished and yarned last week aboard the cruiser Tuscaloosa in Cocos' Chatham Bay, with the radioed permission of Costa Rica's President León Cortés Castro. On his fourth visit* to the peaceful blue waters that lick Cocos' shores the President was still only after fish; still had only meagre fisherman's luck. Back in Panama the natives were swearing by the Roosevelt luck (he arrived on Feb. 18; No. 18 turned up in the lottery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: At Cocos | 3/4/1940 | See Source »

Unlike Mexico, which expropriates private property, then pleads inability to pay, Costa Rica is obliged by its Constitution to pay first, then expropriate. Last week President Léon Cortés Castro approved a plan to dig up the necessary payment-a Government bond issue mortgaging the firm's $3,000,000 power plant. The sirens which acclaimed future Government control of a U. S. public utility were premature, however. Three million dollars would be a staggering amount for agricultural Costa Rica's 591,000 inhabitants to kick in for such a bond issue at home. Abroad...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PUBLIC UTILITIES: Electric Ax | 9/5/1938 | See Source »

Borrowed by Director Roland J. McKinney of the Baltimore Museum of Art were 149 pieces representing virtually the entire range of Maya civilization from 1 A.D. to 1541 A.D. The Aztecs, whose beautiful city of Tencchtitlàn was razed by Hernando Cortés in 1521, were a late-flowering branch of this civilization. Accurate astronomy and mathematics, a written language, games with rubber balls were known to the Maya people. The truncated pyramids on which the Maya built their temples still stand in the jungles of Mexico and Yucatan. Like the jungle itself, their carvings were luxuriant with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Mexicans & Friends | 11/22/1937 | See Source »

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