Word: skips
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Those at the theatre included: Mr. Bingham, Dick Harlow, Howle Odell, Ray Crowther, Skip Stahley, Wes Fesler, Jimmy Dunn and Henry Lamar of the coaching staff C. F. Getchell, general manager of the H.A.A.; Frank Ryan, publicity director; Walter H. Page, II '37, football manager, Robert T. Whitman '38, assistant football manager; Caspar W. Weinberger '38 and Donald B. Straus '38, Crimson football writers; and Frank Lunden, Norman Fradd, and Jim McRae of the H.A.A...
...mild-mannered, stoop-shouldered mathematics professor of Wisconsin University is blissfully married, and, he thinks, free to skip away with his jovial wife to the Isle of Capri, there to write a book about mathematics, but tied up in some symbolical way with paper dolls. The reason why the couple feel so jubilantly footloose is that they have married off two of their daughters, and are about to place the third. But the reversal is sudden and through: two of the daughters come stalking home, and the third one quarrels with her beau...
Dick Harlow has divided his squad into two rival camps for this contest, one coached by Wes Fesler and Skip Stahley; the other by Rae Crowther and Howie O'Dell. These squads were divided with the object of making a close game, not as A and B groups...
Keen competition for the blocking back berth continues, as "Skip" Stahley is working with about a dozen potential touchdown trail blazers. Due to a slight knee injury suffered by Johnny Nesmith, a likely line-bucker, Mal McTernan has been shifted from Stahley's group where he spent the first two days of practice, and is now reenforcing the ranks of ball carriers...
...Bates wrote an involved and melodramatic story about the Spanish revolution, painting vivid pictures of Spanish working-class life and weakening his story with long discussions of art and philosophy. More involved than that promising first novel, The Olive Field similarly contains much that most readers will want to skip, but it also contains a narrative forceful enough to carry readers beyond dull spots, presents a general picture of revolutionary Spain that seems to square with modern Spanish history...