Word: starrs
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...with a loss of 134 lives, in one of the greatest U. S. marine disasters (TIME, Sept. 17, 1934). Though Acting Captain Warms was the last man to leave his ship, a court presently convicted him of criminal negligence, sentenced him to two years in jail. Chief Engineer Eben Starr Abbott, who abandoned ship in the first lifeboat, was convicted on the same charge, given four years in jail. The Ward Line was fined $10,000, its Executive Vice President Henry Edward Cabaud $5,000 (TIME, Feb. 10, 1936). Mr. Cabaud and the Line paid their fines, but Warms...
Coach Samborski has added another pitcher, Phil Starr, to his undermanned hurling staff. This brings the Freshman southern jaunt list...
...other pitcher will be chosen from Tom Casey, Tom Healey, and Phil Starr; Lutz, now playing first base, may also be used as a pitcher, and Wood will be moved from second base to the outfield...
Those retained for further practice are, infielders: Freedley, Heiskill, Lutz, Morrill, Page, McPherson, Thomas, Wood. Outfielders: Bowen, Kelley, Locke, MacDonald, Noyes, Williston, Catchers: Fulton, Gorham, Pratt. Pitchers: Casey, Healey, Moore, Starr, and Woodward...
...that, got muddled." After the war he took a house for his family at Cape Town, next to Cecil Rhodes's, wintered there for seven years. Kipling's best-known poem, If,* which has been translated into 27 languages, was based on the character of Dr. Leander Starr Jameson, of Jameson Raid fame. Much of his patriotic verse (including Recessional) was given to newspapers free. "It does not much matter what people think of a man after his death, but I should not like the people whose good opinion I valued to believe that I took money...