Word: hodgson
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...players garnered all their points in the second and third periods, after which Barron of the visitors tallied in the final quarter for Dean's only score. HARVARD 1933 DEAN ACADEMY Fitch, g. g., Wirtling Vandermark, r.f.b. l.f.b., Cosley, Kelley Hasbrook, l.f.b. r.f.b., Rugan Martin, l.h.b. r.h.b., Hodgson Galloway, c.h.b. c.h.b., Fernandez Denison, Grassman, r.h.b. l.h.b., Larsen Schumacher, r.o.f. l.o.f., Collingwood Lindsey, Eaton, r.i.f. l.i.f., Cycowski Eaton, Wygant, Heard, c.f. c.f., Barron Waters, Ossorio, l.i.f., r.o.f., Smith Masjoan, Williams, l.o.f. r.o.f., Dupuis, Wilson...
Married. George Herman ("Babe") Ruth of Manhattan, potent baseballer (New York Yankees) and Mrs. Claire Hodgson, widowed showgirl; in Manhattan, at 5:45 a. m. The first Mrs. Ruth, long estranged from her husband and living with a dentist of Watertown, Mass., was recently burned to death (TIME...
Their candle blew out while an English metallurgist named Hodgson and his son, according to last week's despatches, were poking about the Golconda lead mine at Hopton, Derbyshire. In the blackness they saw a dull greenish glow. It came from a chunk of radioactive rock, no surprise in a lead mine.* The rock assayed $300 worth of radium to the ton, a new "natural resource" for Britain and science...
...portrait of President Harding is hanging in the White House because the joint congressional committee on the library, acting on recommendation of Charles Moore, chairman of the commission of fine arts, declined to accept either one of two portraits painted for that purpose by E. Hodgson Smart, a distinguished English artist. One of these portraits, described by Gertrude Richardson Brigham in Art and Archeology as "one of the few great portraits of a president," and considered by George B. Christian, the late President's friend and secretary, as the best painted likeness of Mr. Harding has been purchased...
...modern poet, terse, brief, never wordy, sinning, if in any way, in the opposite degree. Let us set her up to begin with, a woman poet fittingly the cornerstone of our modern "Gentleman's Library." We can follow along then rather briskly with A. E. Housman, W. H. Davies, Hodgson, Robert Frost, de la Mare. They are conventional but they would have shocked the lady's father and grandfather. Then too there is Hardy, a link between three generations, the Victorian, the eighteen nineties, and the twentieth century. But only genuinely appreciated by our own age. Men like Hardy...