Word: yukon
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...succeed B. Adams Cartey '36, who left yesterday on an expedition to the Yukon, the skiing team has elected as captain R. Colin Maclaurin '38 of Boston. Maclaurin was the ranking No. 2 man on the Harvard team and has been racing for three years...
...prepared for college at Milton. This year he tied for second place in the University downhill race and was eighth at Dartmouth. Carier, who has headed the skiers hitherto, is a member of the National Geographic expedition that H. Bradford Washburn '33 is leading into the Yukon Territory this winter...
...college books showed liabilities of $30,000, assets of two bonds valued at $1,000 each. Now Treasurer Plimpton is 79 and Barnard, at 45, has property and endowment totalling $9,000,000 spends one-tenth that amount every year. Once while he was traveling on the Yukon River with the late great Jacob Schiff, that immigrant financier mentioned proudly that he would soon celebrate the 50th anniversary of his arrival in the U. S with only $500. On the anniversary, shrewd Mr Plimpton sent him a note, received $550,000 in return. On another occasion John Davison Rockefeller...
...Klondike River, in Canada's Yukon Territory, was the place to go for gold. As the summer neared its close the trail from the fields down through White Pass to the Alaskan port of Skagway was a jostling procession of prospectors. On Aug. 13 the Islander, 240-ft. pride of the Skagway-Victoria Line, steamed out of port with a 61-man crew, 108 passengers, a dozen stowaways, began threading its way through the narrow straits. At 2 a. m., when most of the passengers had reeled off to bed, the Islander hit something with a mighty impact, sank...
...spring of 1914, the year the Alaska Railroad was begun. Frank Adams, John Holmberg and Tom Jensen loaded up with salt pork, coffee and flour at Fort Yukon and went prospecting up the Yukon River. They took Sweet Marie along for company. Folks around Fort Yukon learned that they had made a fairly good strike. Then word came in that the prospectors had fallen to quarreling. Next thing heard was that Tom Jensen had killed Adams, Holmberg and the Schmidt woman and run off with a poke worth some...