Word: postes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Coach Vaughan has altered his line-up during the last two weeks. Jack Bissell, out since Christmas with an injured elbow, has again taken his post at center on the first line. Captain Bob Burke, formerly with Barrett on the defense, has been shifted to the right wing position where he played as a Freshman. Vaughan is hoping this combination will increase the team's scoring powers...
Budge Miller has been shifted from his right wing post on the second line to defense, where he teams with Harry Farker. The cage assignment has been handled by both Nicoll and Coleman; Coleman played the entire Yale game, but during the Clarkson encounter her trouble in the first frame and was relieved by Nicoll...
...first and most successful was the International Rail Makers' Association which appeared in 1884. The European Steel Cartel has been turbulent but relatively successful. It was formed in 1926 by Germany, France, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Saar to overcome through production quotas the disastrous effects of post-War overproduction. In the past dozen years it has been abandoned and revived, depending on the world demand for steel and on the relative production costs in the various countries (those that stayed on gold longest had their throats cut). In 1935 Great Britain signed up, leaving only the U. S., Russia...
...last week Chicago newspapers received two publicity releases from Pressagent G. R. Schaeffer of Marshall Field & Co. One announced the promotion of Luther H. Hodges, an employe for 19 years, to the post of general manager of the manufacturing division. Said the other...
...skulled world; nobody has caught the tones of its odd, original speech, or the flavor of its half-ironic, half-fatuous humor. But with a collection of brief sketches published last month, a young Manhattan reporter looked like the most promising candidate so far for Lardner's vacant post. His stories showed much of Lardner's tormented sympathy for voluble boneheads, a good deal of his ability to write common speech without making it grotesque, but less of Lardner's misanthropy or his flair for turning a street-corner conversation into a story of general significance...