Word: heatedly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...yard run--First heat--won by W. C. Scott '34 (five yards); second, W. C. Rowe '31 (minus two yards); third, J. W. Higgins '33 (seven yards). Time 45 3-5 sec. Second heat--won by G. R. Porter '34 (five yards); second, W. L. Hasler '34 (three yards); third, G. F. Bennett '33. Finals won by W. C. Scott '34 (five yards); second, G. F. Bennett '33, third, J. W. Higgins '34 (seven yards). Time...
...yard dash--First heat--won by J. C. Brown '34 (three yards); second, B. L. Hennessey 1L., third, R. B. Winslow '31 (two yards). Time--7 3-5 sec. Second heat--won by W. C. Scott '34 (three yards); second, N. P. Dodge '33, third, L. Merz '34 (4 yards). Time--7 3-5 sec. Third heat--won by G. N. Williams '34 (two yards); second, W. L. Rasler '34 (one yard); third, E. R. Rockett (one yard). Time--7 3-5 sec. Fourth heat--won by J. A. Curtiss '34 (three yards); second, G. F. Bennett '33 (one yard...
...Last winter fire destroyed Mrs. McLaughlin's Chicago dog refuge, "Orphans of the Storm," and 89 dogs. Fortnight ago she opened a new dog refuge built at a cost of $8,600, with accommodation for 150 dogs, steam heat, hot and cold water, two attendants...
...about the 1897 game with the Cadets this same sports writer gives present day followers an insight on the condition of the men. There were hardly ever any substitutions except under special circumstances. The day on which the '97 game was being played was a hot one and the heat and the dust combined to make the tilt almost unbearable. There was no relief until near the end when we read that "Doucette and Haughton were compelled through exhaustion to retire from the field." The Haughton of that game was the same one who was to make a name...
...with speed last week by simply including the week-old Argentine government in an announcement recognizing the new governments of Peru (three weeks old) and Bolivia (three months old). Almost simultaneously the London Foreign Office announced that its relations with Argentina remained unbroken. Statesman Stimson had run a dead heat with Great Britain. He listed minor reasons first for his diplomatic omnibus: i) the new governments were de facto; 2) nobody resisted them; 3) each had promised to regularize its status constitutionally. One half of the real reason for quick recognition he explained thus: "I have deemed it wise...