Word: harold
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Sidney S. Alexander '36; Paul J. Allen '36; Charles DeL. Ashmore '38; George W. Bergquist '38; Harold van B. Cleveland '38; Everett R. Coburn, Jr. '38; Kenneth E. Colton '36; Louis H. Conger, Jr. '37; Perry J. Culver '37; Robert J. Cumming '38; W. Tucker Dean, Jr. '37; William H. K. Denaldson '37; William F. Eberlein '38; Egbert W. Fischer '36; John J. Frankevicz '36; Verne R. Fulmer...
...charge of having violated the Sherman Anti-Trust Law by withholding their films from three St. Louis cinemansions (TIME, Oct. 14); by a Federal court jury; in St. Louis. The case was regarded as a prime test of the legality of the U. S. cinema distributing system. Died. Harold Ellicott Scarborough, 38, until lately European editorial manager and head of the London Bureau of the New York Herald Tribune; by leaping from the Southampton-bound Berengaria off the Isle of Wight. With the Tribune and Herald Tribune since 1920, he had been recalled to Manhattan to write editorials, had resigned...
...Witnesses of Jehovah had popped up in U. S. public schools. In Lynn aging Cora Foster, who had taught in local schools for 40 years, faced dismissal after confessing that she, too, was a Witness. In nearby Saugus seven young Witnesses were expelled. In Weymouth high school Witnesses Charles & Harold Newcomb, who claim to be descendants of Betsy Ross, staged a sympathy strike against "the Devil's emblem." In Norwalk. Conn., a 13-year-old Witness was barred from all school activities except classes. Suspended from the Lakewood, N. J., high school, a 16-year-old was given...
...dreaded his reunion with his fat, tactless mother who had taunted him about his lameness; he was oppressed by thoughts of living in Newstead, the chill, half-ruined manor that was haunted with memories of the crimes of his wild ancestors. He carried with him the manuscript of Childe Harold but expected nothing from that poem. On Aug. 1, his mother died. Next day one of his dearest friends was drowned. On Aug. 12, in the depths of despondency, he composed his "outrageous" will that carried its explicit provision for the "disposal of his carcass." He slept in an enormous...
Albert H. Walker '37, Newton Centre; Francis J. Walsh '36, of Cambridge; Thayer S. Warshaw '37, of Lawrence; Earl M. Watson '36, of W. Medford; Ira A. Watson '37, of Brockton; Earle H. Webster '36, of Bridgewater; Leicester Warren, Jr. '38, of Springfield; Harold P. Welch '36, of Winchendon; Robert E. Wernick '38, of Brighton; Raymond Wexier '36, of Fall River; Leonard B. Wheildon '36, of Framingham; Theodore H. White '38, of Boston; Walter S. White '36, of Cambridge; Francis J. Whitfield '36, of Springfield; John W. Whittlesey '37, of West Newton; Sumner Willard '37, of Lynn; Harold Winkler...