Word: frederick
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...play, a regular old comedy, thriller involving ghosts, coffins, intrigues, and rowdy fights, is being prepared under the able coaching of Professor Frederick C. Packard, Jr. '20, professor of Public Speaking, and Mr. Robert Young. The cast will swing into the final week with a dress rehearsal tonight...
Robert J. Hampson; Frederick W. Heckel, 3rd.; Carter W. Howell; Robert Kaplan; Richard M. Klein; Richard J. Loughlin; Eugene F. Murphy; Jeremiah R. O'Neil, Jr.; John W. Otvos; John H. Perry; Edward T. Powers; Irving H. Soden; Henry S. Thompson, Jr.; Arthur B. Wells, and Alexander Winsor...
...John Adzigian '36; Thomas H. Bilodeau '37; Paul F. Connolly '36; Paul K. Doyle '38; James F. Garrett '38; David B. Macintosh '37; Frank J. Owen '37; Timothy J. Reardon, Jr. '38; Herbert G. Regan '37; Frederick W. Schneider '37; David W. Shean, Jr. '38; James R. Small '38; James T. Sullivan '37; John J. Sullivan '38; George F. Tyler, Jr. '38; Richard O. Ulin '38; John R. Weston '38; Paul L. Wilson...
...fraternal buttons and colored caps, the members of the Co-operative Clubs of Kansas City gave President Frederick Arnold Middlebush of University of Missouri a rousing build-up as guest speaker by singing Sweet Adeline. Guest Speaker Middlebush fidgeted, rose, exploded: "That song arouses no sentiment in me. When I was elected to the presidency of the University of Missouri a few months ago I was forced to give up my quiet home on the outskirts of Columbia and move down on the campus. Every Saturday night since then I have heard the last passing Sweet Adeline never earlier than...
Adolf Hitler was by no means the only bigwig in Garmisch-Partenkirchen last week. His entourage included Air Minister Göring, Minister of Propaganda Goebbels, War Minister von Blomberg, Julius Streicher, Interior Minister Frick, Storm Troop Leader Lutze and almost every other important Nazi in Germany. Nonetheless, Correspondent Frederick T. Birchall of the New York Times, which last autumn gave the loudest bursts of publicity to Jeremiah T. Mahoney's efforts to have the U. S. withdraw from the 1936 Olympic Games (TIME, Nov. 4), felt justified in writing: ". . . Not the slightest evidence of religious, political or racial...