Word: finley
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Seattle last week Superior Court Judge Howard M. Finley soberly heard churchmen expound the quality of a bishop's "godly judgment." Since the Episcopal Church drew up its constitution in 1789, its Canon 42 had been brought into civil court only once before-in New Jersey in 1893. Tortuous and hedged with ambiguities was the question Judge Finley was to decide: had Bishop Simeon Arthur Huston the right to oust Rev. Charles Stanley Mook from Trinity Church without taking counsel with the Standing Committee of his diocese...
...Frank Finley Merriam had stayed in Iowa where he was born 68 years ago he would have been spared a lot of trouble last week. He taught school, published a newspaper, gravitated from the Midwest to Long Beach. Calif., became a bank president, a realtor, a Knight of Pythias, a politician, and six weeks ago upon the death of James Rolph Jr., Governor of California just in time to face the best brand of California dynamite?a strike...
...Lect. Hall Mr. Walsh, Sec. P New Lect. Hall Economics 4 Harvard 6 Engin. Sciences 8 Pierce 302 Fine Arts 1a Fogg Large Rm. Geography 34 Geography Bldg. German 8 Sever 24 German 9 Sever 24 German 24 Sever 24 Government 4 Sever 23 Greek B (see footnote*) Dr. Finley, Sec. 2 Sever 29 History 7 Emerson 211 History 61b Sever 30 History of Religions 1 Sever 17 Italian 1 Sever 18 Italian 10 Sever 35 Japanese 1 Boylston 25 Mathematics A VII (see footnote*) Mr. Van Schaack, Sec. 1 Sever 7 Mr. Sard, Sec. 2 Sever 8 Mathematics...
...slender, grey-haired conductor, a pious wealthy woman and a Dayton, Ohio church which had earnest hard-working choristers gave Westminster Choir its start. The conductor was Dr. John Finley Williamson, quiet son of a British clergyman, whose aim in life was to improve church music, make it more devotional, restore some of the artistic prestige it had in the days of Palestrina, Haydn, Bach. The first Westminster Choir (1920) was composed of factory workers and named for Dayton's Westminster Presbyterian Church where it sang Sundays. But John Williamson was not content with one group's singing...
...Burgoyne, The Surrender of Cornwallis, The Resignation of General Washington) in the rotunda of the U. S. Capitol for which the Government paid him the generous sum of $32,000. Most striking in the gallery of early Americans was a dynamic Head of Lafayette by Inventor-Painter Samuel Finley Breese Morse...