Word: winter
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...bloody Rightist attack west of Toledo beaten off, and another that captured several hundred yards of dugouts and trenches on the Aragon front near Olivan, were the only actions of importance on the ground last week. No qualified observers would admit that the winter's stalemate for which all Spanish noncombatants were devoutly praying...
...Bremen and Europa seven years later she was Germany's largest ship, crack vessel of its mercantile marine; then the Columbus fell into third place. Re-turbined in 1929, the Columbus filled in with her two big sisters for the transatlantic busy season, began her famed winter cruises...
When the refurbished Columbus sails late in December for the West Indies she will be but one of the 30-odd important vessels "cruising for the winter"-a branch of shipping that many ocean lines now consider an integral part of their business, for it keeps their ships occupied during the slack transatlantic season. The cruising business has not yet been materially affected by the present depression except for the abandonment of the sold-out Round-the-World cruise of the Bremen scheduled for February 1938-due partly to cancelations by passengers after the early autumn recessions...
John Herrick, now playing basketball, will possibly pole vault in the winter, and will certainly be back throwing the discus in the spring. He is rated high in the East...
William L. Copithorne '38, Somerville; Nicholas J. Cotsonas, Jr. '40, Roxbury; Edward M. Davis, Jr. '40, Winter Park, Florida; Joseph T. Doyle '39, Providence, Rhode Island; Elmer A. Evans '38, Dorchester; Milton Gold '38, New York; James A. Hamill '38, Quincy; Robert B. Hayden '40, Newtonville; Charles A. Kane '39, Roslindale...