Word: star
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...after the Christmas vacation, but he has been pronounced fit for tonight's game and will resume his old post at right defense, pairing with Captain Traf Hicks. While Harvard regains the services of a valuable defense man, B.U. has lost one of their key points, Richardson, captain and star of the undefeated B.U. Freshmen last year...
Former Varsity captain Richard T. Fisher '36 and Robert D. Fallon '33 are entered in the medley and 100 freestyle respectively, with Fisher also slated to swim the 100 backstroke. Last year's star butterflyer, Greg Jameson '36 will be the principal hope of the Alumni. It is doubted whether Dario Berizzi '38, recently converted to breaststroke, will be able to hold Jameson for the 100-yard course, although Berizzi has exhibited considerable power in time trials...
...last November discussing the legal aspects of the Narragansett Park mix-up. These articles have been expanded considerably, packed between a clarifying introduction and a voluminous set of appendices, and salted down with a fistfulls of apt quotations. As an Added Feature there is a photostat of the famous "Star Tribune" asserting Governor Quinn to be in an insane asylum and (for the kiddies) lots of pictures of soldiers and horses...
...thing no dictator can do is control the weather. Another thing no dictator can do is make cinemaddicts prefer one movie star to another. Hollywood's dictator, the box office, realistically recognizes this fact, always bows to the unpredictable will of the people. Last week a nationwide poll on the comparative popularity of current cinema stars showed Hollywood which way to bow. The one-day poll was conducted by 53 newspapers of the Chicago Tribune-New York News Syndicate (combined circulation approximately 20,000,000) in the U. S. and Canada. Results (male and female separately...
...completed ship the Allies took, handing her proudly over to Britain's White Star Line which ran her for years as the Homeric. Last year she was broken up for scrap. Meantime work was again started on her weathering sister ship on the keel site of 1914. In 1922, two years after Danzig became a Free City, the graceful beauty was launched, christened the Columbus. Until the advent of the Bremen and Europa seven years later she was Germany's largest ship, crack vessel of its mercantile marine; then the Columbus fell into third place. Re-turbined...