Word: racing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Because the Jew has a family loyalty, and a race loyalty, but no national loyalty he is not affected by the war situation in the manner of a European type. The Jew, a realist, sees the economic waste of war, and desires peace in which to make his competitive economic superiority manifest. The European so completely lacks the rational disinclination of the Jew to fight that he applies to it the term "cowardice,"* and does not recognize it as a virtue. Thus many Jews died during the War, but many more were able to distance competitors in business whose commercial...
Captain Victor Cazelet, who was unable to play as a member of the English team at Detroit because of his participation in the race for the individual crown, will hold the number one position in today's match. The other members of the visiting team are Colonel W. F. Bassett, P. de L. Casanove, F. M. Strawson and G. S. Incledon-Webber...
Dixon, present title holder, Cazalet, singles champion of England last year, Wright and Baker are the four most favored competitors in the race for the crown. Cazalet has beaten both Dixon and Wright, scoring a comparatively easy win over Dixon, and coming up from behind to beat Wright in the Canadian championship finals...
Faced with a considerable lead to overcome, the Boston University relay team entered the last quarter of its race against the Crimson, with the chances of victory very slim indeed. Running anchor against Captain Haggerty, Mastaglio of the Terriers, however, performed the seemingly impossible; overcame his handicap, and leaping to the fore broke the tape a foot in front of the Harvard leader. The time was 3 minutes, 9 and four-fifths seconds...
Once again, Montgomery Wells, stellar Dartmouth hurdler, flashed through in five and four fifths seconds to equal his own world's record for the event. In second place, Ballantyne of the University ran a fine race but was distanced...