Word: tims
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...defeated Bird (A), referee's decision; 165-pound class: Donald B. Armstrong, Jr. '37 defeated Porter (A), referee's decision (overtime); 175-pound class: Gerard J. Piel '37 defeated Meader (A), referee's decision: Unlimited Class: Fletcher (A) defeated William B. Gresham, Jr., fall, 5.30. Referee: C. R. Huntington. Tim- ers: Whiting, Robertson (A); Frank G. Jewett...
...wood backing the rear walls of two of the courts is improperly cured, and has caused the timbers to swell and buckle. The back frame is made of square timbers of about three inches in thickness, set up vertically and horizontally about nine inches apart. On swelling, the horizontal tim- bers forced the vertical ones out, caused the whole wall to buckle, and become unfit for play, and necessitated a complete rebuilding of the wall by the University Maintenance Department. Investigation reveals that this is an unusual circumstance in a court only three years old, one which can be laid...
Died, Timothy J. ("Tim") Crowe, 58, onetime (1926-28) president of Chicago's Sanitary District, while awaiting appeal from his conviction to defraud taxpayers out of $5,000,000 during the Sanitary District's scandalously extravagant era (1926-28); of heart disease; at Williams Bay, Wis. After his trial in February 1932, he had said: "I'll never live to go to jail." Last week the Chicago Hearstpapers revealed that Patrick-Nash, Cook County Democratic boss, whose contracting firm did a big business with the Sanitary District, was forced to settle a Federal tax claim on unreported...
...Koldhard Fax" will be played by K. F. Mather, professor of Geology, in the presentation of "License Revoked," a one-act play on capital punishment. Mather will be arrayed against Mand Lynn Sentiment, Mrs. Vie Tim Foakes, and Spear I. T. Murder...
Remote though it is from the hurly-burly of day-to-day U. S. life, the Supreme Court is not unresponsive to the shifting economic thought of the nation. Its membership changes with tim and so does its concept of the law. New ideas, like cosmic rays, have a way of penetrating its ancient wall of detachment and starting little legal revolutions in its august consciousness. Many a sage observer believes that the Supreme Court today would reverse itself on child labor, would find a way to sustain minimum wage legislation...