Word: edwards
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Hollis scholarship, established in 1722 "for pious young students designed for the ministry," to Edward P. Wallace '41, of Newton Center, Massachusetts...
...Edward H. Addelson '39, Charles D. Aldrich '40, Graham G. Alverd (37 ocC, Wayne F. Anderson '41, Dion J. J. Archon '40, Edmund W. Banas '39, James M. Banghart '40, Bernard Barber '39, Clarence H. Barber '40, Abraham N. Barger '39, Harry E. von Bergen '41, Edward A. Bergstrom '39, Christoph F. W. Berliner '40, Melvin B. Black '40, Howard L. Blackwell Jr. '39, Norman D. Blotner '40, Coleridge A. Braithwaite '39, Norman H. Brisson '39, Sidney I. Brodie '40, Harold James Etmekjian '39, Murray F. Foss '40, Melvin H. Freedman '41, Pasquale F. Frisoli '40, William R. Frye...
John F. Ambrose '41, Nathan Belfer '41, Phillip J. Blumberg '39, Robert M. Boyd '41, Milton P. Brown '40, Edward L. Burwell '41, Lawrence a. Campbell '39, John L. Chase '39, William N. Dale '40, Alfred Eisner '39, John J. Fernsler '40, Richard B. Finn '39, Edward A. Fox '41, Luke M. Gibson ocC, David R. V. Golding '41, Roland Kahn '41, William P. Keats...
Died. Pat Crowe, 69, famed ex-train robber, kidnapper and jewel thief; of heart disease; in Manhattan. In 1900 Crowe helped kidnap 15-year-old Edward Aloysius Cudahy Jr. (now president of Cudahy Packing Co.) in Omaha, Neb. When he was apprehended five years later, he charged Cudahy with engineering the plot himself. The jury acquitted him. In 1929 the Bertillon Bureau of the Buffalo police checked the fingerprints of a suicide, identified him as Crowe. Same day Pat Crowe, then reformed, walked vehemently into Manhattan's police headquarters to deny his death...
Frosty, white-haired President Francis Edward Frothingham of the Investment Bankers Association of America has a watch which, besides telling the time, boasts a chime, a barometer and a gadget that registers how the moon will be each night. Last week as I. B. A. gathered for its annual convention at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., the moon was only a thin sliver - an appropriate symbol for the investment banking business. Keynoted retiring President Frothingham: "Broadly speaking, there has for some time been no flow of new capital, the capital that employs men. From an average...