Word: prout
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Henrich '28, G. A. Tupper '30, and Mason are slated to face the Michigan hurdlers. The Crimson weight men will be David Guarnaccia '29 and C. A. Pratt '28. The pole vault promises to be a close fight between F. B. Clark '28, B. G. Burbank '28, and Prout, Michigan's veteran. F. T. Burgess '30, Harvard's only entry in the high jump, will have to outdo Waldo, who has cleared 5 feet, 10 5-8 inches to take second in the recent Big Ten meet...
Died. William C. Prout, 40, president of the American Olympic Council (Olympic Games); in Boston; after a long illness...
Chief Judge at Finish: William F. Garcelon, Harvard. Judges at Finish: W. J. Bingham '16, Rupert B. Thomas, Princeton; Louis C. Madeira, Pennsylvania; John T. Kilpatrick, Yale; William C. Prout, Brown; J. T. Mahoney, C.C. N. Y. Starters: John J. McHugh, P. S. A. L. N. Y., Hugh C. McGrath, Boston. Chief Timer. Mortimer Bishop, New York University, Timers: Charles J. Dieges, N. Y. A. C., George L. Moylan, Harvard; Charles A. S. Hatfield, Fordham; William A. Schick '05, Harvard...
...President Roosevelt (United States)?Lou E. Holland, President of the Advertising Clubs of the World; William C. Prout, President of the Amateur Athletic Union...
After a century of intensified research, physicists are coming back to the old hypothesis of William Prout that all matter is made up of one fundamental stuff--hydrogen. The laws of conservation of mass and energy, and the law of limited transmutability of matter, too, are in a state of flux. Calvin Page disregards completely the efforts of such eminent workers as Rutherford, Aston, J. J. Thomson, Soddy, and Millikan, and boldly launches forth upon the exploitation of his formula, phlogistic in its nature, intended to explain all natural phenomena in a "common-sense" way. He is backed...