Word: frasers
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...committee of grave judges (Mrs. John Davison Rockefeller, Sculptors James Earle Fraser, Harriet Whitney Frishmuth, Critic Elisabeth Luther Gary) wandered around the tables of Ovington's New York china shop, awarded...
...approval were Chancellor Elmer Ellsworth Brown of New York University ("Would be glad to enter such a combination"); President Daniel L. Marsh of Boston University ("Full accord"); President William Wistar Comfort of Haverford College ("Perfectly evident"). Less sure of the scheme as it stood were Dean of Men Fraser Metzger of Rutgers University ("Dr. Butler's position . . . is well founded"); President Ernest Martin Hopkins of Dartmouth ("Certainly worth considering"); President Thomas Sovereign Gates of University of Pennsylvania ("Sympathetic consideration"); President Frank Aydelotte of Swarthmore ("Evils of academic sports . . . come really from the spectators"); President Walter Dill Scott of Northwestern...
...producers claim that it sets a new standard of authenticity both in colonial backgrounds and in picturization of the crafts of spinning and weaving. "The Medal Maker" was made especially for the American Numismatic Society and demonstrates the making of medals and coins as done by Laura Gardin Fraser, maker of the official government medals of Lindbergh and Byrd...
Engaged. Vera, Countess of Cathcart, fortyish, divorced wife of the late George Cathcart, 5th Earl of Cathcart, previously Vera Fraser of Cape Town, later the widow of Capt. de Grey Warter of the 4th Dragoon Guards; and Sir Rowland Frederic William Hodge, seventyish; famed shipbuilder; in London, a week after the marriage of Lady Cathcart's son Henry de Grey Warter to Mabel Bowers Rean of British vaudeville. In 1926 Lady Cathcart was temporarily refused entry to the U. S. in a famed case of "moral turpitude." Three years prior she had gone to Cape Town with the Earl...
Most laymen working to help the deaf are themselves hard of hearing. They include Starling Winston Childs, Manhattan banker; Adolph Bloch, Manhattan corporation lawyer; Norman Fraser, Chicago, retired; Mr. Justice A. Rives Hall, Montreal; Judge Simon Bass, St. Louis; Mrs. James Flack Norris, Boston; Mrs. James Rudolph Garfield, Cleveland daughter-in-law of the late President, wife of the 1907-09 Secretary of Interior. Also a worker for deaf people, though not herself aurally inefficient, is Mrs. Calvin Coolidge...