Word: fording
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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John M. Callaway, Alfred H. Corbett, Perry James Culver, Thomas J. Darcey, Jr., Emile Dubiel, Leo A. Ecker, William B. Emmons, Jr., James A. Field, George S. Ford, James A. Ford, Bennett Frankel, Brice A. Frey, Jr., James J. Fuld, Colmery Gibson, Francis A. Goodhue, Jr., Hamilton Hadden, Jr., James B. Hallett, Robert C. Holcombe, David L. Howe, Thomas B. Husband...
George S. Ford, of Belmont, won the John Tuder Memorial Cup and Richard M. Claflin '36, of Brookline, was awarded the Angier Hockey Trophy according to an announcement made last night at the annual dinner of the varsity hockey squad at the Hotel Manager...
...John Tudor '29, is awarded annually to "the player who is of the greatest value to Harvard hockey, not so much because of his ability but because of his heart." The recipient of the trophy is supposed to be the player who best exemplifies John Tudor's qualities. Ford, captain elect of the 1937 squad, was center on last year's squad, and has been on the varsity football team...
...readers unaccustomed to Ford Madox Ford's style, Vive Le Roy might seem, almost purposely confusing. It might also seem as if everyone in the book were going about in disguise-Author Ford himself in a rather hasty imitation of E. Phillips Oppenheim. Those who are not too impatient to put up with his sighing way of writing may persevere through his ingenious plot and discover that he has written a thriller. But even Ford fans will not compare Vive Le Roy with Author Ford's War novels. Still a first-rate gossip at 62, some...
...sight. After their first night in it, Leroy leaves their studio to deliver his dangerous package. Why he never gets to his destination, what becomes of him and Cassie, just how sinister MM. de la Penthièvre and Penkethman really are, and how plausible is Author Ford's portentous plot may be left to the panting reader...