Word: bryden
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Crimson entries Robert M. O'Neil '56 and David P. Bryden '57 upheld the negative of the controversial recognition of Red China topic. They were the only team out of the 27 college entered that went undefeated in seven preliminary rounds...
Besides winning the top team award, the debaters placed second and third in both negative and affirmative individual ratings. Richard P. Anderson '56 was second in the affirmative class followed by Joseph E. Frank '56. David P. Bryden '57 and D. Frank Hayden '57 ranked second and third respectively in the negative classification...
...negative team of Elling O. Eide, Daniel F. Hayden, and David P. Bryden, defeated Princeton here Friday night on the same topic. Yale finished second, and Princeton was third...
...greatest peacetime Army expansion in U. S. history, the General Staff is as busy as beavers in a springtime flood. To lighten the work of Deputy Chief of Staff William Bryden, Chief of Staff General George Catlett Marshall fortnight ago appointed a second deputy: scholarly, friendly Brigadier General Richard Curtis Moore of the Engineers. Last week General Marshall appointed another Engineer officer to take Dick Moore's place as head of the G-4 (supply) section of the General Staff. Chosen to run the section which oversees most of the household details of Army life, from buying soldiers...
...rest of the staff and bosses the show when the Chief is away. In the past 14 months, he has made six circuits of the continental U. S., side trips (mostly by air) to Hawaii, Panama, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, and his deputy, balding 60-year-old Brigadier General William Bryden, has had plenty to do. Crack Artilleryman Bryden commanded artillery brigades in 1917-18, is the only member of the staff who was a general officer in World War I. When George Marshall called him he was C. O. of the 13th Field Artillery Brigade...