Word: finished
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1930
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...anyone wants to hear his story. Everyone can see that he is quite rattled now and the room quiets down as the "speaker" continues. While the story progresses, Charley Sullivan, in whispers, circulates an order that no one laugh when the joke has been given. As the new man finishes, waiting for the applause which is not to come, everyone wants to know where the joke is. They urge him to continue, assuring the youth that they are still listening and want him to finish. Of course he does not know what to say and usually does nothing except blush...
...course has been changed to enable the runners to finish as near as possible to the New Field House, Soldiers Field. The University race will start at the Brown and Nichols corner, and will continue along the Cambridge side of the Charles River to the Mt. Auburn cemetery. The runners will then complete two loops over and around the hill back of the cemetery, and will cross the Watertown Bridge, finishing the race near the Boston side of the Larz Anderson Bridge. The Freshman course will begin at the same place but will omit the "loops" to reduce the course...
Instantly Papa bristled. He too had to fight under the irascible Tiger of France. "Foch," he snapped, "was right! Clemenceau-" but the Marshal did not finish. He knew a newshawk was listening. He has vowed that his memoirs shall not be published until after he is dead. Therefore he slipped back into his character of "Papa," concluded urbanely as snippets of whiskers fell all around, "Yes, Foch was right, but [shrugging his sheet-covered shoulders] soldiers and politicians are not always made by the Good God to get along with each other...
...pick up and gained 30 yards by good line play. Two first downs were made and not until a 15 yard penalty was levied on the University 1934 team did its attack stop. A series of exchange punts followed and both teams played an evenly divided game until the finish...
...secs. Be and Hazen of New Hampshire had been running a close race from the start, but in the last 150 yards, Hallowell managed to secure a lead of about 10 yards, and increased it slightly before the end of the race. After Hazen, the next five men to finish were F. D. Murphy '33, R. P. Wesley '33, J. M. Fox '32, Arthur Foote '33, and B. E. Estes '32. The next few places were taken by alternating Harvard and New Hampshire men. Captain R. C. Aldrich...