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Word: cooperativeness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...meeting of the Minor Sports Council held yesterday, W. A. Huppuch '33 was chosen chairman and W. G. Cooper, Jr. '33 secretary of the organization for the coming year. Huppuch is captain of this year's Varsity basketball team, and received a Phi Beta Kappa in his Junior year. Cooper is captain of the Varsity boxing team. The Minor Sports Council is comprised of the captains and managers of all the recognized minor sports teams. The chief aim of the council is to improve the spirit of cooperation among the various teams, and to place the minor sports...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OFFICERS OF MINOR SPORTS COUNCIL CHOSEN FOR YEAR | 10/14/1932 | See Source »

Just out of a German prison camp and serving with Herbert Hoover's relief administration, U. S. Pilot Merian Coldwell Cooper was deeply shocked when a Russian cavalry detachment swooped down on a group of meanly-armed youths defending the fortified city of Lwow, sabered to death all but a handful. Pilot Cooper persuaded Polish authorities to let him recruit a squadron of War-trained pilots still loafing in Paris cafes. Back to Warsaw he took ten crack flyers. Major Cedric E. Fauntleroy had been chief test and ordnance pilot of the A. E. F., later flew with Rickenbacker...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Kosciuszko Squadron | 10/10/1932 | See Source »

...Pilot Cooper was shot down in the retreat but when surrounded by Cossacks he said he was an enlisted man, showed his hands, calloused and blistered from overhauling motors. After a year in foul Russian prisons, he miraculously escaped and returned to the unit. Pilot Cooper later wrote for the New York Times, then set out to film Grass, epic migration of a remote Persian tribe. This he followed with the immensely profitable Chang, filmed in. Siam. A descendant of Count Casimir, Pulaski's second-in-command at the Battle of Savannah, affable Pilot Cooper is now an associate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Kosciuszko Squadron | 10/10/1932 | See Source »

...could continue to hold scholarships. From 1,500 to 2,500 foreign students were affected, chiefly in New York and California. Last week arose a great hue & cry, led by Dr. John Henry MacCracken, associate director of the American Council on Education, U. S. Commissioner of Education William John Cooper, President Livingston Farrand of Cornell University, President James Lukens McConaughy of Wesleyan, President Cloyd Heck Marvin of George Washington (Washington, D. C.) and President Nicholas Murray Butler of polyglot Columbia, who cried, "Reactionary and stupid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Reactionary and Stupid | 10/10/1932 | See Source »

Reported Reporter Morley: "The President is a good man. He pronounces economics correctly, with a long e. Beware of statesmen who call it eckonomics. . . .* He does not care for wildcat literature. He sank his shafts deep into the solid ore of Balzac, Brontė, Cooper, Dickens, Dumas, George Eliot, Bret Harte, Hawthorne, Howells, Kipling, Meredith, Scott, Stevenson, Thackeray, Mark Twain. . . . There is nothing austerely highbrow in his choice: he enjoyed the same thrillers you and I were reared on. He knows his James Bryce, John Fiske, Parkman, Prescott, James Ford Rhodes, Trevelyan, Truslow Adams. . . . Among late American novelists his favorites seem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Wanted: a Poem | 10/3/1932 | See Source »

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