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Word: webber (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Wesleyan led all the way, and it was only when Coach Earl Brown inserted his second quintet that play perked up for the Crimson. The second five, sparked by Ed Rothschild, including Bill Webber, George Dillon, Bunks Burditt, and Jack Torgan, who finished up the first half, cut Wesleyan's lead from seven points to a mere two, the period ending with the score...

Author: By A. EDWARD Rowae, | Title: FESLER'S WESLELAN QUINTET UPSETS CRIMSON FIVE, 33 TO 31 | 12/15/1941 | See Source »

...post as Crimson Varsity hoop mentor last year to become head coach of football and basketball at Wesleyan, will be out to defeat his former charges, including five Senior veterans who learned basketball under him for two years. They are Captain Bud Finegan, Joe Romano, Ed Buckley, Bill Webber, and Ed Rothschild...

Author: By A.edward Rowse, | Title: Swimmers Seek to Submerge Alumni Tonight' Hoopsters Will Clash With Wesleyan Five | 12/13/1941 | See Source »

...Crimson lineup: gls fls pts Romano, l.f. 7 3 17 Dillon 0 0 0 Lutz, r.f. 1 1 3 Webber 4 0 8 Lutze, c. 1 1 3 Burditt 2 0 4 Finegan, l.g. 2 1 5 Torgan 0 0 0 Buckley, g 2 0 4 Snyder 0 0 0 Rothschild 1 0 2 Totals...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON QUINTET BOWS IN OVERTIME, 52 to 46 | 12/11/1941 | See Source »

Brown is building around a nuclous of five returning Senior lettermen: Captain Bud Finegan, Ed Buckley, Joe Romano, Ed Rothschild, and Bill Webber. He also will count heavily on three Sophomores: Don Lutze, Chick Lutz, and George Burditt...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Nineteen Hoopsters Report For Practice | 11/25/1941 | See Source »

...title-piece consists of ten propitious chapters of the novel Wolfe was working on when he died. The Hills Beyond was to be the story of the ancestors of George Webber. In these chapters Wolfe laid out a brilliant panorama of 19th-Century Southern society, its law, war, murder and myth. Somewhere past midstream in his transition from wild lyric romanticism to humanism, this prose here lost in effusive splendor, but gained in wit, firmness and control...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Last Words | 10/20/1941 | See Source »

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