Word: michigan
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...most ambitious schedules ever undertaken, Dick Harlow's men will play home games with Cornell, Dartmouth, Navy, Army, Brown, and Yale, and will journey to Philadelphia and Princeton to face the Quakers and the Tigers. Cornell replaces Amherst and Navy replaces Michigan on the list...
...schedule: Oct. 4 Penn at Philadelphia 11 Cornell at Cambridge 18 Dartmouth at Cambridge 25 Navy at Cambridge Nov. 1 Princeton at Princeton 8 Army at Cambridge 15 Brown at Cambridge 22 Yale at Cambridge The 1940 schedule, already announced, is: Oct. 5 Amherst at Cambridge 12 Michigan at Cambridge 19 Army at Cambridge 26 Dartmouth at Cambridge Nov. 2 Princeton at Cambridge 9 Penn at Philadelphia 16 Brown at Cambridge 23 Yale at New Haven
Into this sorry mess stepped Michigan's senile, godly, sometimes cunning Governor Luren Dudley Dickinson. To Lansing he summoned Chrysler's President K. T. Keller and Vice President Herman Weckler, the C. I. O. United Automobile Workers' President Roland Jay Thomas, Richard Frankensteen, et al. No strong man, 80-year-old Mr. Dickinson tried none of the around-the-clock, tire-'em-out tactics which ex-Governor Frank Murphy used to apply to stubborn negotiators. As though he were teaching his Bible class in the Center Eaton Methodist Church near Charlotte, Mich., Luren Dickinson piped...
...Champaign, Ill., on the same field where famed Red Grange scored five touchdowns against Michigan 15 years ago, an Illinois team, smarting under Michigan's Coach Crisler's recent boast that Tom Harmon is a greater back than Grange, made Crisler eat crow. Playing inspired football, Bob Zuppke's Illini, who had not won a game this season, bottled Harmon so tightly that he scored only one touchdown, toppled mighty Michigan from the undefeated ranks...
...column is not merely a tower of simple wisdom and reproof for lustful maidens, conscience-stricken wives: it is also a civic institution. Nancy's readers gave her $1,400 to reforest 560 acres of land in northern Michigan, gave more to replant them when the young trees were burned over. In 1932, when the Detroit Symphony was going under, Nancy's newspaper family sponsored six concerts, put the orchestra back on dry land...