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Word: netted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...South Entry of University Hall is a room blithely inscribed "Loan Department," to which all students whose fathers are too entangled in the depression net to be of assistance are promisingly referred. Yet in late months there has been a change; too many have come for succor, more than there was money to go around; and now the room stands there with an apologetic air. Legitimate need in Harvard is theoretically covered by three sources, scholarships, beneficiary aid, and loan funds, and none have proved adequate to the exigencies of depression conditions. Scholastic competition has grown so keen that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GOOD COLLATERAL | 3/3/1933 | See Source »

Nearly a dozen goals were scored, mostly by the Bruins but deGive gave a good account of himself in the net and staved off dangerous thrusts of the "pro" outfit. Coach Stubbs used the regular first line of Saltonstall, Putnam and Baldwin but Pell replaced Beale in the second line. Pell has been the general handy-man of the team, playing both defense positions and the wings at various times during the season. F. H. Gleason '34 and W. A. Lincoln '35 were brought up from the Jayvees today and given Varsity berths because of their showing in the Junior...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SEXTET PREPARES FOR YALE IN BRUIN SET-TO | 3/2/1933 | See Source »

...devastating success at Parisian race tracks. Other milliners hurried in with other high hats. ¶ Plaid evening dresses are enormously popular. In colors navy blue leads black for street wear; "string color," a tannish off-white, is most popular for sports. ¶ Elaborate gloves, jeweled, of wool, taffeta, velvet, net, are shown in most collections...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Higher Hats, Lower Waists | 2/27/1933 | See Source »

...hope of success on its convenient schedules. It not only borrowed railroad tactics but got the Pennsylvania Railroad to handle its tickets and to admit Ludington buses to the Penn terminal in Manhattan. At the end of the first year Ludington had carried 66,000 passengers, showed a net profit of $8,073. Skeptics wondered if the Ludington books were kept in the manner required of airmail operators by the Post Office Department; Executive Vice President Gene Vidal insisted that a profit of even $28,000 might have been rightfully claimed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Vanishing Independents | 2/27/1933 | See Source »

After a goal early in the contest by Arthur, right-wing for the Green, Harvard came back in the second period to tie the score, with Pruyn making the tally from a mix-up in front of the Dartmouth net. The final frame furnished the spectators with plenty of action, for the lead changed hands twice, and not until 19 minutes and 50 seconds had elapsed, did Baldwin's goal on a pass from Putnam give Harvard its hard-earned victory. It was Baldwin, too. who had paved the way for the winning score a few minutes before, when...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GOAL BY BALDWIN BRINGS WIN OVER GREEN SEXTET 3-2 | 2/13/1933 | See Source »

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