Word: hay
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Besides winning the James H. Van Alen cup for the intercollegiate team championship, the Crimson also retained the John Hay Whitney Cup in the singles tournament, which was played off Sunday...
Johns Hopkins File 7 (ABC. 11:30 a.m.-12 noon). All about hay fever and other allergies. With Allergist Dr. Leighton E. Cluff...
...average1½ per commercial farm). Since 1945, they have increased their number of newer work-saving machinery by 1,200%-mostly with machines that had not even been invented in 1938. Farmers have invested $17.5 billion in 1,040,000 combines, 745,000 cornpickers, 590,000 pickup hay balers, 255,000 field forage harvesters and other machinery. They spend $1.5 billion for gasoline and oil each year just to keep the equipment going...
Upon return to America, the family settled in Oakland, California, where the children became thoroughly westernized. Gertrude approved of California because she got "all anybody could want of joyous sweating, of rain and wind, of hunting, of cows and horses and dogs, of chopping wood, of making hay, of dreaming, of lying in a hollow all warm with the sun shining while the wind was howling, of knowing all poor kinds of queer people...
Last year, when John Hay Whitney, U.S. Ambassador to the Court of St. James's, took control of the Trib, the management began to take a different approach to hiring, firing and promotion. Fortnight ago, with enthusiastic staff approval, Day City Editor Richard West (Harvard '29), a veteran Trib hand who had been passed over for promotion three times, was moved up to the city editor's slot. Last week Executive Editor George Cornish-the same man who fired Woodward for "Whitey" Reid in 1948-fired Sports Editor Cooke. His successor: Rufus Stanley Woodward (Amherst...