Word: fosters
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Bigelow, W. V. Binger, F. G. Blake, A. R. Brenholts, O. P. Brown, Reginald Boardman, W. H. Bowen, W. H. Caunt, B. G. Clark, C. H. Cretzmeyer, L. L. Davis, W. N. Dearborn, P. K. Doyle, John Dwinell, F. W. Edlin, G. E. Filion, L. S. Fiaherty, A. McG. Foster, V. W. Foster, F. D. Gardner, J. H. Gardiner, John Gay, A. S. Geismer, S. R. Gifford, W. A. Gosline, I. J. Graff...
...foster swimming and diving and expressly omitting water polo, a new Eastern Intercollegiate Swimming League has been formed, composed of seven eastern colleges including Harvard, and headed by William J. Bingham '16, Director of Athletics. The appointment of Bingham as president and of H. Jamison Swarts, Assistant Director of Athletics at Pennsylvania, as secretary, was announced last night...
Importation of culture can never produce the intellectual morale that is bred by the slow internal growth of an integrated department in any field of knowledge. Mr. Conant can afford the university a plethora of great names, but unless the upward trend of the curricula is such as to foster their development within the ranks of the undergraduate and graduate body, the situation admits of defeat. Great benefit is obviously derived from collected outside talent, but greater benefit would accrue from creating at least some few of the giants by from within. Aside from the patently mechanized deficiencies...
...Cradle (usually a week or ten days old) are not long in finding homes. Come rich & poor alike, from every U. S. state, from many a foreign land-from South America, China, Japan, India where a missionary has adopted first one, then another. Although not demanded of any foster parent, those adopters who can afford to do so send yearly donations. A knitting school, a cafeteria for 75? lunches, a layette shop are popular socialite centres for eating and shopping for baby clothes. When news of The Cradle reached Hollywood, where most would-be mothers find little time for childbearing...
Like all other foster parents of Cradle babies, the Jolsons last week could rest assured that their son had normal expectancy to live. Mrs. Walrath permits no child to be adopted unless it is healthy and normal. Congenitally-diseased babies, babies with syphilitic tendencies, are sent to institutions soon as the customary Cradle stay-usually about five weeks- has elapsed. All parents are given the record of the real mother, and whatever information concerning the father the mother will supply. Mrs. Walrath has had great luck in wangling the truth out of them. She tries to match the children with...