Word: strongely
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Despite the fact that practically the same team started both the scrimmages held this week, the football season is still very much in its experimental stage. Especially is this true in the case of the ends and the quarterbacks. With a large number of strong ends and no veteran quarterbacks, Coach Arnold Horween '21 yesterday decided to strengthen his supply of signal callers at the expense of the wingmen. G. K. Brown '28, who has been playing regularly on teams A and B was shifted, temporarily at least, to quarter at the conclusion of the morning session...
...Clark '29, rackles; Daniel Simonds '28 and Guilford Stewart '28, guards; R. W. Turner '28, center; D. V. Kelley '28, quarterback; David Guarnaccia '29, J. P. Crosby '29, and T. G. Moore '29, backs. The same team, with the exception of W. W. Lord '28 and B. H. Strong '28 at ends, went in at the start of the afternoon scrimmage...
...chief address, telling fellow psychologists: "We may have to revise our notions of what being dead implies. We may have to conceive of the mind of a dead person as persisting in some form that permits it to be still available as a source of knowledge." He argued the strong case for telepathy, admitted the weak case of clairvoyance...
Five sets of championship ten-nis can make strong men sob., To play those five sets a man must have a sturdy heart; a stomach un-corroded with strong drink, a breath uncontaminated by cafe smoke...
Until last August the rediscount rates of all 12 Federal Reserve Banks had been, for a relatively long time, 4%. Then in July when chiefs of the English, French and German central banks of issue visited with Governor Benjamin Strong of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, (TIME, July 11), men came from Manhattan, according to the Chicago Journal of Commerce, asking that Governor James B. McDougal of the Chicago Federal Reserve Bank initiate a movement (which the other banks might ostensibly follow), to reduce the general 4% rate to 3½%. If money could be borrowed cheaply...