Word: clemently
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...even missed Pennsylvania's annual meeting last month. Last week he attended his first directors' meeting in a nine-month, and then only to nominate his successor. Bowing to Mr. Atterbury's desire to retire, the directors elected, as Pennsylvania's tenth ruler, Martin Withington Clement, vice president and active head of the $2,000,000,000 system during Mr. Atterbury's long absence...
...Clement Scott is even more convinced that the debacle of civilization is imminent; chronicling the various respects in which the appetite of the nation for blood, violence and horror has been assiduously whetted by the papers, the movies and "Esquire," he concludes in "America Tomorrow," that "the upper-class male" is about ready to attend revivals of gladitorial games, and suggests that "the decline of the American Republic" is thus evident...
...party for candidates held Thursday night at the Russian Bear, the Harvard Dramatic Club inducted five undergraduates into membership. The new members are Roy C. Hieks, Jr. '37; Richard W. Ittelson '37; Daniel E. O'Reilly '38; Clement Scott '36; and Henry B. Urrows...
Broad jump: Winslow L. Pettingell, Robert C. Stuart; discus: John H. Herrick; distance: Laurence S. Flaherty, Alexander C. Northrup, Randall W. Richards, Jr., William H. Wright, Jr.; javelin: Paul M. Glendenning, Charles D. Ruch; half-mile: Sherman Brayton, Arthur J. Clement, Jr., Robert E. Rogers, Adoniram J. Wells, Jr.; hammer: Stephen H. Brennan, Jr., Charles D. Ruch; high-jump: George D. W. Berry, Winslow L. Pettingell, Theodore Plotkin, William W. Shirk; hurdles: Robert Fawcett, Douglas B. Kitchel, Carroll R. Laymen, Theodore P. Robie, John P. Sparrow; pole-vault: Winslow L. Pettingell; quarter-mile: Herbert L. Furse; shotput: Robert C. Downes...
Some 6,000 ft. over a Detroit suburb last week Clement Joseph ("Clem") Sohn stepped from an airplane, spread his arms and legs, soared and glided down on the batlike wings which last month made him front-page news (TIME, March 11). At 1,000 ft. he folded his wings, opened his parachute, floated safely to earth...