Word: youngsters
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...replacements, Cooke, a youngster and Ingram's first understudy, is likely to draw attention. A sharp-shooting passer, he promises to develop into a triple-threat. Ned Thomas and Charley Reimann, who started against the Irish in place of Ingram and Schmidt, both use their speed to advantage and Fay Wilsie is a first-class bucking and blocking back. In the line Gunderson and Janney at guard, Hessel at tackle, and Emrich and Bringle, ends, should see a good deal of action...
...Baltimore tussle in good condition. The tentative eleven announced by Lieutenant Tom Hamilton, Head Coach, early this week, included Miller, center; Soucek and Fike, ends; Case, Schmidt, Ingram, and Antrim in the backfield. Of these men, Miller, Soucek, Morrell, and Schmidt are first-classmen, or seniors; Hysong, a youngster, or sophomore; and the rest second-classmen (juniors). Ingram needs no introduction to anyone who has followed Navy fortunes this year: the Tars' attack has in large part been built around his running and passing, and it was his drop kick which beat Notre Dame last Saturday. Schmidt, who last year...
...little tot, "Dimples" differs from the previous parade of Temple screen monopolizations only in the Shirley has an opportunity for real acting in her portrayal of Little Eva's death in "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Admirers of the wonder child will be pleased with the talent the youngster displays in this sequence, and those who are not so impressed will appreciate the able acting of Frank Morgan as the grandfather, and he anties of Stepin Fotchit...
Celebrating his 70th birthday at London's P.E.N. Club banquet, said H. G. Wells: "I just hate it. I feel like a youngster sitting on the floor with all my games spread out before me. . . . It is as if my nurse were coming to me to say: 'Bertie, it is getting late-time to put those toys away...
...discovered a Lionel de Jersey Harvard in Plymouth, England. A descendant of John Harvard, he was brought to Harvard in 1911, graduated cum lande in 1915 to be killed in the British Army during the War. Last week his son, Peter Harvard, 19, was imported for the Tercentenary. This youngster took no active part in the exercises, was shunted quietly about as an interesting historical exhibit. Peter is enrolled at Durham Engineering School, where he will probably remain...