Word: eleanore
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...ELEANOR WENNERBERG...
...ELEANOR MORGAN GRAIN...
Working with Dr. Clark on his rabbit's ear "window" has been Eleanor Linton Clark, 42, his wife. They married in 1911, when he was associate professor of anatomy at Johns Hopkins. Ever since she has been a "private investigator in anatomy" and his immediate assistant wherever he has taught-Johns Hopkins (1907-14), University of Missouri (1914-22), University of Georgia (1922-26), University of Pennsylvania (since 1926). She is one of the few women recognized by American Men of Science. The Clarks are one of the very few couples who jointly have attained scientific eminence. Another such...
...deep-rooted Washington belief is that Mrs. Nicholas ("Princess Alice") Longworth, wife of the Speaker of the House, exercises a potent backstage influence on U. S. politics. When Mrs. Eleanor Medill Patterson (onetime Countess Gizycka) became editrix of William Randolph Hearst's Washington Herald last summer, she attracted notice with a signed front-page declaration to the effect that the only political assistance Mrs. Longworth could render Senate Nominee Ruth Hanna McCormick in Illinois was posing for photographs. It appeared that the Countess was out to explode the "Princess" legend, for business or other reasons. Last week Editor Patterson...
...Lawyer Smith, now "F. E." to every potent barrister in England, pocketed close to $200,000 as his outrageous fee for counseling British tobacco interests how to deal with America's then rampant tobacco tycoon, James B. Duke. To celebrate he took a bride from Oxford. She, Margaret Eleanor Furneaux, dutiful daughter of a canny old Latin Professor, had obeyed her father when he told her to put off marrying Freddy some years earlier, "because one meets so many rising young men who never seem to rise...