Word: bernards
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Nearly 140 men are expected to report to Soldiers Field today at 3 o'clock for the initial House baseball practice of the season. Under the direction of Bernard D. White 2G and Norman J. Harris '36 the men will work out on two of the diamonds for a week, and the official schedule will begin next Tuesday...
...Abbott Lawrence Lowell, who had headed the Council after the death of John Grier Hibben, stepped up and out of the picture by becoming honorary president. To succeed him as president, the Council elected Mrs. August Belmont, who before her marriage was Actress Eleanor Robson. For her George Bernard Shaw wrote his ablest social service play, Major Barbara. Of late years Mrs. Belmont has been giving most of her energies to fund-raising for the relief of New York's jobless. For honorary vice presidents she had Mrs. Calvin Coolidge and Mrs. James Roosevelt, the President's mother...
...walls of the court. Late in the match, he stopped volleying shots that he should have taken on the rebound off the backwall, ran out the fifth set for match and title, 3-6, 6-4, 6-5, 4-6, 6-2. A socialite product of St. Bernard's, St. Paul's and Harvard (1931), Phipps took up court-tennis in his last year at college. To become the best amateur player in the country took him less time than most men require to learn to score. An amateur bridge player, expert enough to play in professional tournaments...
...Harvard and Radcliffe actors who had been retained Monday were assigned to the different roles. All the parts are now filled with the exception of a few minor bits. The cast follows: John, Allan L. Steinberg '35;--Drunk Swell, John Cromwell '36; Leonard the Learned, Arthur Szathmary '37; Bernard the Brave, Richard C. Sullivan '35; Percy the Prosperous, Robert L. McKee '37; Egbert the Eccentric, Paul Killiam, Jr. '37; Lewis the Loving, James W. Tower '35; Albert the Acquisitive, John Michael '35; Herold the Helpful, Whitney M. Cook '36; Inebriated Philosophers. Stephen Greene '37 and William M. Hunt...
...Noting "consumer resistance to goods of German origin," Manhattan's R. H. Macy & Co. announced that in the past six months their German orders had declined 98%. Hence, the biggest department store in the U. S. was closing its Berlin purchasing office, moving to Prague. Few days later Bernard F. Gimbel announced: "There now being practically no demand for German merchandise Gimbel Brothers, Inc. have discontinued buying German goods." Other big Manhattan department stores which have closed their Berlin offices or otherwise stopped buying German goods include Lord & Taylor, which led off the boycott last autumn, Bloomingdale Brothers, Best...