Word: washing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Moses Abramovitz '32, Brooklyn, N. Y.; G. H. Acheson '33, Pittsburgh, Pa.; J. B. Ames '32, Wayland, Mass.; M. L. Anshen '33, Boston; C. M. Arensberg '31, Pittsburgh, Pa.; W. O. Aydelotte '31, Swarthmore, Pa.; M. S. Beeler '31, Seattle, Wash.; F. E. Bissell, Jr. '31. Dubuque, Iowa; J. A. Booth '33, E. Boston J. L. Brock '32, Buffalo. N. Y.; F. O. Canfield '32, New York City; B. G. Carleton '31, New York City; Henry Chalfant, Jr. '31, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Leslie Cheek, Jr. '31, Nashville Tenn.; J. A. Cooper '33, Birmingham, Ala.; D. C. Dennett, Jr. '31, Winchester...
Ruth Vassos has written the book; her husband John has illustrated it with wash drawings whose futuristic potency well entitle them to be called "projections...
Senator Wesley Livsey Jones was driving placidly home to his ranch near Wenatchee, Wash, one day last week when on a narrow road his automobile confronted another from the opposite direction. He stopped as the other car, unable to pass, ran into a bank. Two youngsters jumped out of it, fled up into the bushes. Behind them came speeding a third machine out of which jumped two more men with revolvers. Senator Jones in open-mouthed wonder, watched them also disappear into the bushes, heard shots. Soon they emerged with the runaways, one of whom was wounded. Senator Jones...
Both boats as usual carried every stitch of canvas they had. Often The baud dipped her rail into the wash, but Bluenose, heavier and longer, stood up. Before long Thebaud pulled away. Her sails were better cut and set and she pulled smoothly into the wind; Bluenose's big mainsail was so ungainly that Captain Walters had to swing it by the topping lift; her topsails were shapeless sacks. When Thebaud had won the race, twice round the course with an extra lap up Gloucester harbor, by 15 minutes, Bluenose's sails were rushed to a loft...
Died. Enoch W. ("Baggy") Bagshaw, Supervisor of Transportation for the State of Washington, onetime coach of University of Washington's championship footballers (led the Pacific Coast Conference in 1925); suddenly, of apoplexy, at Olympia, Wash. After last year's unsuccessful season, Washington alumni and undergraduates agreed to pay Bagshaw his contract salary for two years more if he would resign. He resigned. (Last week the Washington team trounced Montana...