Word: clemently
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...honored for their scholastic achievement in the professional school were: Carl J. Antonellis '37 of Medford; George A. Dodge, II '37, Brookline; Clement S. Dwyer '37, Boston and Raymond Yesner '35, Boston. All are candidates for a medical degree in June...
...Chamberlain. He was tall and stringy, with the distinction of being the only British statesman who could sing Negro spirituals (learned as a young man when he was trying to raise sisal in the Bahamas), and the biggest feet in the Cabinet. He also had gout and bunions. Clement Attlee once said that Chamberlain's smile reminded him of the silver handles of a coffin. A kindlier woman said his eyes were "cold and smiling, like a Scandinavian river...
...given to Maurice W. Armstrong; Oliver S. Beltz; Richard Cummings, John R. Dallinger; John Daugman; Howard F. Dunn; Ward J. Fellows; John H. Gerstner; William H. Gysan; Gleen P. Holman; Robert LaV. Jacobs; Carl K. Lien; John A. Martin; Edwin A. Olson; Howard E. Runner; Clarence A. Wagner; and Clement W. Welsh...
...still a great preaching, teaching and missionary order, effective enough to breed enemies both inside and outside the Catholic Church. The Jesuits have been suppressed, at one time or another, in nearly every nation in which they have labored. Under political pressure from Spain, Portugal and France, Pope Clement XIV suppressed the order in 1773. Pius VII revived it in 1814. Under Franco and Petain the Jesuits have been freed from decrees aimed against them by Republican Spain and France. Last January they were given permission to enter Greece for the first time since the 17th Century. Only country which...
...Clement was allowed to keep his ambulance and work in the German Army. Eventually he got back to Brussels and from there, with a diplomatic mission, to Switzerland, where he still remains...