Word: conn
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...chairmen, Arthur Harold Harlow Jr. of New York City, John Orren Ross of Redding, Conn., Richard Waterman Thayer of Boston. R. W. Thayer was the only one of the sub-chairmen who had not been chosen before. Members of the Committee, Julius Henry Appleton of Springfield, Nathan Spencer Barnes of Passadena, Cal., George Neal Burns of Rochester, N. Y., George Joseph Cleary of Naugatuck, Conn., Philip Ives Dunne, of New York City, Robert, Bigelow Gowing of Boston, Alfred Herman Hersch of White Plains, N. Y., Paul Albert Newsome of Lorain, O., Philip Hamilton Rhinelander of Gloucester, Ernest Stent...
...Bragdon '28, of Rochester, N. Y., Lincoln Davol Brayton '28, of Fall River, Henry Chauncey '28, of Columbus, O. Charles Martin Clark Jr. '28, of New York, N. Y., Frank Bryant Cutts '28, of Providence, R. L. Langdon Dearborn '28, of Havana, Cuba, Richard Thomas Dunn '28, of Bridgeport, Conn., Thomas Hopkinson Eliot '28, of Cambridge, Allen Orrick Fordyce '28, of St. Louis, Mo., George Tappan Francis Jr. '28, of Boston, Edward Bass Hall '28, of Cambridge, Arthur Andrews Holbrook '28, of Milwaukee, Wis., Thorndike Dudley Howe Jr. '28, of Boston, Robert Ingle Hunneman '28, of Brookline, William Barksdale Jones...
Besides approving the arrangements for the Assembly, the Executive Committee also passed on the appointment of two additional Red Book sub-chairmen. John Orrsen Ross of Redding. Conn, was appointed sub-Chairman of the Editorial Board, and Oscar Straus Schafer of New York City, sub-Chairman of the Photographic Board...
...that his father, who had been very ill for several days, was sinking. Instructions were sent out to prepare a special train. That afternoon the President and Mrs. Coolidge, attended only by Attorney General Sargent and the inevitable newspapermen, began their journey to Vermont. When the train reached Bridgeport, Conn., a telegram relayed from the White House was received...
...Manhattan from Riverside, Conn., came last week Dr. W. E. Dentinger to speak, at a meeting of the National Life Conservation Society at the Hotel Astor, on "Musico-therapy." Just the thing, he said, for hysteria. Ladies in the audience were asked to close their eyes, relax, while a pianist concealed from view played soothingly, monotonously, Schubert's Serenade, Vice President Dawes' Melody in A. Good for cows, too, he said, makes them give more milk (see MEDICINE, p. 28), makes hens lay more eggs, helped Saul's insanity, cured Gladstone's rheumatism. Fourteen Manhattan hospitals...