Word: bernards
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Although President Roosevelt has been conferring with some of the conservative members of the Democratic party like Bernard M. Baruch and Alfred E. Smith, the new deal is going ahead full steam with no sign of any abatement of the gold policy, which has become such a factor of unsettlement in the world of business and finance...
...Honorable Leverett Saltonstall '14, speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives; Lawrence S. Mayo '10, assistant dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences; Bernard A. DeVoto '18, instructor in English; William K. Richardson '80; and Stewart Mitchell, managing editor of the New England Quarterly, and member of the Massachusetts Historical Society, will be the guests of honor at the Leverett House dinner to be held next Wednesday at 6.30 o'clock. After dinner, Samuel E. Morison '07, professor of History, will speak in the Junior common room on President John Leverett, for whom the House was named...
...Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, Vassar and Wellesley. In 1931 they presented their case-that they get only one-tenth as much as big Eastern men's colleges-at a Manhattan luncheon. In 1932 they had their needs studied by an advisory council headed by Newton D. Baker and including Bernard Mannes Baruch, Thomas William Lament and Owen D. Young. Last week the banded seven sent their presidents West, to dine in St. Louis with friends and alumnae. They went in a distinguished phalanx-Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, Marion Edwards Park, Mary Emma Woolley, Ada Louise Comstock, William Allen Neilson, Henry Noble...
...John Hay Whitney's famed team of dappled grey hunters. Two Leggins, Grey Knight, Bon Diable, which took first, second and third in their class. They will meet hotter competition in Manhattan from the stables of Mrs. Bernard F. Gimbel, Mrs. John V. Bouvier III and Isaac Clothier Jr. ?ho did not exhibit at Chicago...
...Johns Hopkins. Named for the famed scholar-diplomat who was once a Johns Hopkins postgradu ate fellow, the School was founded by popular subscription. Owen D. Young chairmanned a committee to raise $1.000,000. The late Publisher Edward William Bok gave $50,000 to finance the first year. Bernard Mannes Baruch gave $250,000 for a scholarly inquiry into the relation between profiteering and the causes...