Word: hilliards
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Scores--First Period: Calloway (14.38); Duffey (Dewey) (16.31). Second Period: Hovenanian (Holmes) (3.59); Hallowell (11.40). Third Period: Hilliard (Savard) (14.00); Kingsley (Lombard) (15.25). Penalties--Watts (Kicking the puck); Hilliard (tripping); Lombard (holding); Savard (tripping); Watts (roughing); Andres (roughing); Dow (heard Check). Referee--Cleary and Raymond. Time--Three 20-minute periods...
...their first meeting in November, but last night the Crimson stickmen controlled the contest until the last period, when Coach Stubbs gave the fourth string an opportunity to practice. The summary: HARVARD OLYMPICS Hasler, Hovenanian, Duffey, Kirkland, l.w. r.w., Smith, Kingsley Moseley, Holmes, Dewey, Watts, c. c., Hilliard, Lombard Beale, Hallowell, Calloway, Lincoln, r.w. l.w., Harris, Lombard Watts, Ware, r.d. r.d., Savard, Martin deGive, Mittell, g. g., Moone...
...publisher, George Oppenheimer (The Viking Press). Deciding to write a play, Publisher Oppenheimer wondered what would happen if a person whose life is devoted to being brilliant were thrown into a houseful of Boston socialites. His answer is highly amusing to almost everyone but the socialites. Mary Hilliard (Ruth Gordon) is bizarre, witty, peripatetic, alcoholic. When they get drunk she and her friend Stanley Dale (Charles D. Brown) go travelling. Once they went to Siam. This time they go to Nassau, where Mary Hilliard's one-time husband, Philip Graves (Donald Macdonald), is trying to persuade fresh, serious Claire...
Further to persuade Mrs. Windrew to accept Philip as a son-in-law Mary Hilliard tells her that her daughter's present fiancé has been spending nights in Atlantic City with a Vanities girl. Unfortunately this turns out to be true, not only of the fiance but also of Mrs. Windrew's young son. By this time everybody is on the point of hysterics, including Mary Hilliard, who has suddenly decided she wants Philip for herself...
...TIME (Letters, June 20) Mr. Albert Hilliard of Nevada questions the reference to my husband as "banjo-eyed Norman Klein" in your issue of May 23, wonders if the epithet angers Mr. Klein as it does Moon Mullins...