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Drifting in on a light westerly breeze yesterday, George Nichols, Jr. '43 and Daye Noyes '44 skippered their 12-foot Tech dinghies over the finish line on the Charles River basin to capture second place, three points behind favored Dartmouth, in the Erwin H. Schell Trophy Race...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SAILORS TAKE 2ND AT TECH | 10/27/1941 | See Source »

...Matlack Phyllis Palson, RadcliffeSingerly C. McCartney Alice Lynch, WheatonJ. Robert Moskin Hepzibah McWeebles, Dunkling-on-CharlesWilliam J. Moss Natalie Gale, BeaverWilliam L. Nutting Polly Palmer, WheatonWilliam C. Palson Priscilla Tapley, SmithWillard Platt Patricia Elliot, WellesleyBroaddus Robinson Patricia Drew, BeaverO. Glenn Saxon, Jr. Bobsie Deming, The Day SchoolErwin H. Schell Alice Minot, CambridgeRichard D. Solo Helen Salters, BrooklineEdward B. Stevens Andy Johnson, Miss Wheeler'sPeter Gram Swing Patricia Lee, SmithFenton Taylor, Jr. Eleanor Root, New YorkAndrew W. Welch, Jr. Barbara Kelly, EmmanuelWELD HALLHenry Applebach Louise StuartElibu H. Berman Muriel Goldman, Hartford, Conn.Frederic H. Bird Ann Tyrrell, Colby Junior CollegeJerry M. Brown...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 300 COUPLES TO ATTEND JUBILEE | 5/23/1941 | See Source »

Following the race on Saturday, the Yardling lightweights plan to enter the American Rowing Association Regatta for 150-pound crews, which comes off a week from next Saturday. The boat which will start against Yale and Princeton is as follows: Snell Robinson bow, Haskell Schell 2, Dick Moot 3, John Ellison 4, Armiger Jagos 5, Locke 6, Francis Cunningham stroke, and Albert Olsen...

Author: By Henry N. Platt jr., | Title: SPORTS of the CRIMSON | 5/7/1941 | See Source »

Freshman 150s: Robinson bow, Schell 2, Moot 3, Elison 4, Jagoe 5, Locke 6, Wilson 7, Cunningham stroke, Olsen coxswain...

Author: By John C. Bullard, | Title: Crews, Baseball Team See Action Today | 5/3/1941 | See Source »

Good armies are never too good to learn from each other. At Fort Benning, Ga. and Fort Knox, Ky. in 1936, Germany's Major General (then Colonel) Adolf von Schell was an honored guest of the U.S. Army. He saw its small, experimental mechanized units at work, took back many a valuable lesson for Hitler's Panzer divisions. Last month Chief of Staff George C. Marshall told a Congressional subcommittee: "In the last two weeks we have gotten more exact data than we have previously had as to the employment of German armored and motorized forces. . . ." When this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMY: News from the Armored Force | 4/21/1941 | See Source »

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