Word: winslows
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High scoring honors for the Crimson went to Victor Francis who garnered three goals and assisted in three others. The forward line of Gorham, Winslow, and Erwin showed much speed, and with more practice should become a high scoring unity. The defense, Francis and Dan Roosevelt, proved steady in breaking up attacks as well as assisting in the scoring. Hard checking by Roosevelt contributed in stopping threats of Rindge...
...Haverford Richardson, Thomas M. 18 140 5.10 Rutherford High Roosevelt, Daniel S. 19 178 6.2 St. Paul's Scofield, Francis W. 17 155 5.11 Country Day Seamans, Robert C. Jr. 17 165 6.2 Lenox Stewart, John G. 17 165 6.1 Andover Williams, Calvin 17 180 6.1 Hempstead High Winslow, Warren 18 165 5.10 St. Mark's Tackles Burr, Richmond P. 18 175 6.3 Milton Academy Coleman, William C. Jr. 18 177 6. Kent Cohen, Joel, L. 16 220 6.2 Boston English Daniels, Edwin S. 19 185 5.9 Hamilton High Davol, Charles D. Jr. 18 185 6.3 Gunnery Downing, George...
...Samuel M. Folton, George C. Cutler; 1914--Junius S. Morgan, William Tudor Gardiner; 1915--T. Jefferson Coolidge, 3d, Walter H. Trumbull, Jr.; 1916--William J. Bengliam, Charles C. Lund; 1917--James C. White, Henry B. Cabot, Jr.; 1918--John K. Olyphant, Jr., Franklin E. Parker, Jr.; 1919--Cass Canfield, Winslow B. Felton
...biggest cotton land in the world would be 12,481,000 bales of about 500 Ib. each.* Last year the crop was 10,638,000 bales. The estimate was a little higher than expected, although Clinton T. Revere, famed cotton expert for the Manhattan firm of Munds, Winslow & Potter, scored a bull's-eye with a private estimate of 12,498,000 bales, only 17,000 above the Government figure. A month ago the Crop Board estimated that this year's cotton acreage was up less than 10% from the 1935-36 season, and cotton prices jumped...
...mechanic for a time, gets along well with plain men when he sees them as individuals. But pursuit of the Big Money corrupts his native talents as well as his good nature, eventually kills him. Dos Passos frames the story of Anderson with thumbnail sketches of Henry Ford, Frederick Winslow Taylor, inventor of scientific management; and Thorstein Veblen. Like Ford, Charley Anderson had native mechanical skill, loved to tinker with machines. Like Taylor, he suffered because he tried to speed up production, to make manufacture efficient, and shrank from the resulting hostility of workmen. Veblen, a lifelong student...