Word: galways
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...Cynthia Bishop, RadcliffeMerton R. Nachman Nancy Day, WellesleyAlbert Reeves Edith Clifford, EndicottRichard G. Robinson Peggy Heller, New York, N. Y.Alan C. Tindal Barbara Brackett, Connecticut CollegeJohn W. Torrey Miriam Welgold, University of ConnecticutCharles R. Weaver Jean Parrish, Mt. HolyokeWIGGLESWORTH HALLRobert R. Albers Clare Foster, RadcliffeStuart M. Behringer Marjorie Galway, Pine ManorRobert L. Bernstein Barbara Gans, CornellWythe M. Bogy Anne Kaufman, Dalton SchoolMurray Bovarnick Betty Finkel, BrooklineJames A. Brink Mary Harman, Katherine GibbsWorthington Campbell, Jr. Mary Louise King, WinsorCharles J. Cawley Priscilla Taylor, Mt. IdaChester L. Churchill, Jr. Marilyn Morse, BeaverThomas Cowen Edith Allen, WinsorJoseph W. Cummings Mary Miller, LincolnJames...
...next morning the Washington was plowing northward through the fog to make a scheduled call at Galway, Eire. Below, 150 of her Catholic passengers were on their knees at early Mass conducted by the Rev. Henry D. Naber of Cincinnati when suddenly all the ship's sirens and alarms cut loose. As the consecration had just been reached, every Catholic remained kneeling until its conclusion. Then they joined other Washington passengers rushing in night clothes to the deck. From his cabin to the bridge hurried the Washington's worried captain, Harry Manning...
More fortunate than the 5,000,000 in France were 723 U. S. refugees who boarded the U. S. Lines' President Roosevelt in Galway, Eire, landed last week in Manhattan. Next day from Genoa the Manhattan brought 1,914 more, prayerfully glad to be safe in the U. S. Italy's declaration of war this week blacked out the last Continental port open to U. S. ships. Only regular passenger route left between the U. S. and Europe was by Clipper to Lisbon. Next week Pan American will up their two-plane-a-week service to three...
...Defending arrests and intensive police searches for cached I. R. A. arms, he proclaimed: "The liberties for which we are all trustees have been dearly bought. In this land there must not be found one treacherous hand to give them away." From the Most Rev. Michael Browne, Bishop of Galway, came the enormous support of the Catholic Church. "Any Irishman," the Bishop told assembled Connaughtmen, "who assists any foreign power to attack the legitimate authority of his own land is guilty of the most terrible crime against God's law, and there can be no excuse for that crime...
...Joyce family consists of amiable Galway wife Nora, née Barnacle; a son, Giorgio, 33; a dancer-illustrator daughter, Lucia, thirtyish. Giorgio, who married American Helen Gastor, has one son, Stephen James, lives in a Paris suburb where Joyce and his wife frequently visit him. Grandson Stephen is adored by his grandfather, calls the author of Ulysses "Nono...