Word: rowe
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...seating in the first University shell for the triangular regatta in the Charles River Basin this Saturday was still uncertain yesterday afternoon when it was reported that C. E. Mason '30 would probably be unable to row until Monday of next week. C. McK. Norton '29 rowed at No. 4 in Mason's place in yesterday afternoon's workout and will take his place Saturday unless the Sophomore's hands heal more rapidly than is expected...
With Norton out of the second crew D. S. Greer '29, who has been stroking the Junior class eight, was moved to No. 4 in the second University shell where he will row. Saturday if Norton fills Masson's position in the first eight...
...Lisbon, Portugal, one Captain Franz Romer got into a rubber-covered canvas boat, 20 feet long. In it were 55 gallons of water, 590 pounds of food, and some oars. Captain Romer sat down, sniffed the air and started to row across the Atlantic Ocean, to Manhattan...
Owing to an arm injury, W. T. Emmet '29 was replaced for the afternoon at No. 3 in the first boat by C. N. Comstock '30. Emmet, however, will probably row in his regular position this afternoon...
...heard above the silence of Comrade Josef Stalin. Always shabbily dressed, the Dictator prefers to dominate Russia from his unobtrusive post of Secretary of the Communist Party-the only political group permitted to exist. Even at party gatherings Secretary Stalin habitually sits in watchful silence on the back row of a crowded speakers' platform. Therefore when the man whose name means "Steel" suddenly chose to speak, last week, before the Central Committee and the Central Control Committee of the Communist Party, his few words were treasured up as pregnant oracles...