Word: bernards
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Last Tuesday the members of the House Committee were the guests of Professor and Mrs. Clark, and the Kirkland football squad dined together informally on Thursday, with Bernard D. White '32, coach of the squad, as the principal speaker...
...capable performer but temperamental, Williams has by careful attention from Coaches Carr and MacDonald, been developed into a potential star performer. In his two starts of the season to date he has been unscored on. Two other notable cases among the Sophomores are those of Dick Lewis and Bernard Jacobson. When practice opened two and a half weeks age, both men were far behind many other players in knowledge of strategy and execution of tactics, but the coach has already had his patience rewarded by the speed and aggressiveness of Lewis and the steadiness of Jacobson in the Amherst game...
...destroyer of good government. Early in the campaign, Chairman Farley plaintively inquired:"We're both in the same racket. Why does he take digs at me?"Since then he has treated Chairman Hamilton to the ultimate political insult of silence, ignoring him with the contempt of a St. Bernard for a yapping Pekingese. Only when the Republican Chairman backed up his Vice-Presidential Nominee on the subject of banks and life insurance last fortnight did Boss Farley forget himself and roar:"Chairman Hamilton's statement is as ridiculous as other statements he has made during the last...
...Bernard DeVoto began last month as editor of one of America's least read magazines, the Saturday Review of Literature. The Saturday Review of Literature is the kind of magazine you find on public library tables and under the green-shaded gas lamps of the aged but literate spinsters of Beacon Hill. It is ever so slightly intellectual, and ever so slightly classy...
...Bernard DeVoto should do things with it. He is a man who loves an upset. When he edited the Harvard Graduates' Magazine he offended so many old grads so indiscriminately that they demanded his resignation. But when he quit the number of cancelled subscriptions spelled death for the Magazine. He has been treating the readers of the S. R. L. for two or three years now, to excellent although infrequent reviews of headline books. As editor there are possibilities before him which may make the Saturday Review a critical organ without parallel in this country...