Word: brewster
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Elected chairman of the Yale Daily News for next year was Sophomore Jonathan Brewster Bingham, 19, youngest of the seven tall lean sons of tall lean Hiram ("Hi") Bingham, Yaleman (1898), onetime Yale Professor, onetime (1924-33) U. S. Senator from Connecticut. Career doings of the other six Bingham sons: Woodbridge, 32, is studying for a Ph. D. in Chinese history at Stanford University. Hiram Jr., 30, one of the U. S. Foreign Service, is at the U. S. Embassy in London. Alfred Mitchell, 29, an attorney, helps publish the pinko fortnightly Common Sense in Manhattan. Charles Tiffany...
Last week the Ornithologists' Union found itself once more honoring this same bird-lover. To him went the Brewster Medal for the year's best book on American birds. The prize was awarded for a revised edition of his Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America, first published...
Arthur Henry Weed '36, of Milton, was instantly killed in an accident early Saturday night, when the bicycle he was riding was struck by an automobile. The accident occurred on a country road near East Brewster. Weed, who lived in Leverett House, was returning from a bicycle trip to Provincetown with two companions, both Harvard Sophomores. They were uninjured...
...South Station and another at Charlestown, under the old Warren Bridge, which is north of the one the Seaman's Friend launch sails from. The Charlestown taxis are extremely inexpensive, in fact fifteen cents takes you a long way. You can just cruise, going way out to Brewster if the weather is good, or you can take along a lunch and be left to spend the day on Governor's Island or Peddockls, Governor's Island has the ruins of old Fort Winthrop, and is large and explorable but a trifle grubby; Peddock's is way down near Hull. These...
...that he-now an internationally famed economist- would open a School of Land Economics in Manhattan next autumn. When Dr. Ely was 77, he took to wife one of his onetime students, Margaret Harm, and last year he became father of an 8-lb. boy. When that boy, William Brewster, goes to college he will doubtless study the Elementary Economics which his father wrote. But if the school which Dr. Ely was launching last week lives up to its founder's purposes, William Brewster Ely and his generation will also have a far better chance than college students...