Word: cunningham
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...history, labor journalism, labor drama, labor education. Any intelligent person interested in workers may enter, take two years of preparatory, three years of college work. Last year there were 44 students; next autumn 55 are expected. Commonwealth has no commencements, degrees, examinations or roll-calls. Instructors?who include William Cunningham, onetime reporter on the New Orleans Times-Picayune; Arkansas Lawyer Clay Fulks; B. J. Ostrow. one-time cinema critic for the Union City (N. J.) Hudson Dispatch; and Marion Hille. onetime New York show girl?receive no pay, work along with the students...
...amazing race of the meet. When Venzke took the lead, Norwood Penrose Hallowell, a Harvard miler who was beaten in the intercollegiate meet, sprinted to over take him. Venzke matched Hallowell's pace for 20 strides then dropped. Two more collegians, Frank Crowley of Manhattan College and Glenn Cunningham of Kansas, closed in and passed Venzke in the last 60 yd. Venzke slowed down to a slow jog, finished fourth - too far back to make the Olympic team for which he had been training three years...
Married. Eleanor Allen Lamont, daughter of Morgan Partner Thomas William Lamont; and Charles Crehore Cunningham Howard Jr.; in Manhattan...
...Donham '98, dean of the School. Tonight's programme will close with an address by an outstanding business man whose name will be announced at the time. The session in the Baker Library tomorrow morning will be occupied by two talks, "The Future of Our Railroads" by W. J. Cunningham, Hill Professor of Transportation, and "Are There Tangible Signs of Business Recovery", by W. L. Crum, professor of Economics, at 9.30 and 11 o'clock respectively
That morning in Shanghai 10,000 Japanese troops celebrated the Emperor's birthday with a grand military review in Hongkew Park. U. S. Consul General Edwin S. Cunningham, oldest, most experienced of Shanghai diplomats, warned Japanese authorities that such a celebration would be dangerous, but nobody paid attention. In massed squares battalion after battalion of Japanese infantry goose-stepped across the parade ground, each with its fluttering sunburst guidon. In the front of the reviewing stand were many of the highest officers in the Japanese Army & Navy: Vice Admiral Kichisaburo Nomura, Commander of the Shanghai fleet; General Yoshinori Shirakawa...