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Word: michigan (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Figures made public by the Dean's office last week show the comparison of this year's enrollment of the Freshman Class with that of 1933. The 15 states in the National Scholarship area, including Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, California, Oregon, Washington, New Mexico, and Louisiana, had in 1933 an enrollment of 103, or 10.5 per cent of the total of the Freshman class that entered that year, as compared to 176, or 19 per cent this year. The foreign countries and the states other than those in New England, New York, New Jersey...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMPARATIVE FIGURES ON YARDLINGS GIVEN | 10/25/1937 | See Source »

Southern football spectacularly emerged from obscurity in 1906 when the late Dan McGugin, brother-in-law and onetime pupil of Michigan's great Fielding H. Yost, coached a team at Vanderbilt University which scored a 4-to-o victory over the football sensation of the age, Pennsylvania's Carlisle Indians. It emerged again after the War when Centre College, an almost unheard of institution of 200 students at Danville, Ky. flared up briefly with All-America Quarterback Bo McMillin* and upset a string of topflight U. S. teams...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Frenzy in Atlanta | 10/25/1937 | See Source »

...candidates for the degree of M.A. in Teaching) to Richard M. Clark, Molrose; Roderick H. Cox, Birmingham, Michigan; Herbert A. Crosman, Lishon Falls, Maine; Williams Donually, Los Angeles, California; David A. Grodberg, Worcester; George Keoler, New Rochlle, New York; Francis N. Magliozzi, Somerville; Walter J. Nickerson, Jr., West Chester, Pennsylvania; Everett H. Perkins, Bantam, Connecticut; Raymond J. Perry, Malden; and George B. Simon, Newton Centre...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: $5,900 AWARDS GIVEN TO GRADUATE STUDENTS | 10/20/1937 | See Source »

...Park, Ill., second of a family of six, he was only two when his father, a doctor who was also a sports enthusiast, handed him a fishing rod, was not yet in his teens when he graduated to shotgun and rifle. On long hunting trips in northern Michigan he was his father's regular companion. In other respects, he was not so filial. His father had hopes of his becoming a doctor; his mother, artistically inclined herself, wanted him to be a cellist and rigidly enforced hours of supposed practice in which non-musical Hemingway, by "just sitting thinking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: All Stones End . . . | 10/18/1937 | See Source »

...claims to have learned more about war from his post-War reporting of battles in the Near East than he ever did through his own soldiering. This reporting was done for the Toronto Star in the early '20s. Hemingway was by that time married (to Hadley Richardson, childhood Michigan friend), comfortably established in the Montparnasse quarter of Paris. In his spare time he diligently wrote the short stories later to be published as Three Stories & Ten Poems (1923), and in our time (1924). Both were issued by small advance-guardist presses in Paris. Neither created any stir. Since, copies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: All Stones End . . . | 10/18/1937 | See Source »

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