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Stewart's retirement will round off a legal career that began virtually in infancy. As a child, Stewart would listen while his father, a Cincinnati lawyer and one-time mayor who would later serve on the Ohio Supreme Court, simultaneously shaved and rehearsed his courtroom arguments. Schooled at Hotchkiss, Yale and Yale Law School, he served as a deck officer on Navy oilers during World War II, "bored to death 99% of the time, and scared to death 1%." After three years of Wall Street he retired to Cincinnati. In 1954 Stewart was named to the U.S. Court...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: Surprise from the Swing Man | 6/29/1981 | See Source »

...Reed, Ivy League competition does not seem as fierce as her old rivalries with Choate and Hotchkiss...

Author: By Nick Darienzo, | Title: Firkins Reed | 2/24/1981 | See Source »

Despite his slow Western drawl, Baldrige, 58, son of a Nebraska Congressman, embodies the Eastern Establishment that many Reagan backers distrust. He is a graduate of Hotchkiss and Yale (class of 1943) and the brother of Author Letitia Baldrige, who was Jacqueline Kennedy's White House social secretary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: A Trio for Tough Departments | 12/22/1980 | See Source »

Andrews played prep school hockey at Hotchkiss. A varsity player his junior and senior years, Andrews did not anticipate playing Division One Hockey. "I wanted to play hockey in college, I wanted to be involved in a program, but I thought I'd be lucky if I had a chance to play varsity my senior year. I wasn't recruited anywhere and when I came to Harvard neither Timmy Taylor (formerly J.V. coach at Harvard and now head coach at Yale) nor Billy Cleary knew I played hockey," Andrews said in an interview last week...

Author: By Peter Mcloughlin, | Title: Steve Andrews' 'Highs and Lows' of Varsity Hockey | 3/6/1979 | See Source »

...snarling village mastiffs; living with the long silences and terse exchanges on the trail; and the flora, fauna and overwhelming vistas of peaks and valleys at the top of the world. There are frequent outcroppings of autobiography as Matthiessen, scion of a wealthy New York family, graduate of Hotchkiss and Yale and a founder in the 1950s of the Paris Review, writes with painful openness of his wife's death from cancer the year before: "It is not hard to live with a saint, for a saint makes no judgments, but saintlike aspiration presents problems. I found her goodness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Zen and the Art of Watching | 8/7/1978 | See Source »

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