Word: howard
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Folls: Wait (N) defeated C. B. H. Hollister '29, 5-2; Howard (N) defeated D. L. Modell '30, 5-4; M. U. Copland '29 defeated Steer (N), 5-4; Howard (N) defeated C. B. H. Hollister '29, 5-3; Steer (N) defeated D. L. Modell '30, 5-2; M. U. Copland '29 defeated Waite (N), 5-3; Steer (N) defeated C. B. H. Hollister '29, 5-3; Wait (N) defeated J. S. Qettinger '30, 5-4; Howard (N) defeated M.U. Copland...
...Howard of the Navy was the only man to come through with a clean record. Both D. I. Modell '30 and M. U. Copland '29 forced him to a 5 to match. The latter was the star for Harvard, scoring both of Harvard's points in the foils. C. B. H. Hollister '29 and S. C. Smith '31 were the only other Harvard winners, defeating respectively MacFarlane and Wilbur of the Navy in the epee...
...whole containing nearly 400 diamonds (largest stone, five carats) made by Black, Starr & Frost; also a pink leather book containing the names of the lady admirers who presented the brooch (duplicate filed in the secret archives of the State Department) ; a large silver bowl and candlesticks presented by Lady Howard on behalf of the Diplomatic Corps, as wedding gifts for John Coolidge and Florence Trumbull; a check for $100,000 contributed to the endowment of Clarke School for the Deaf (where she used to teach); her ginger-colored chow, Tiny...
Inevitable was the parallel between Bishop Garland and Bishop William Thomas Manning of New York. Both are bishops of wealthy Eastern dioceses. Both have had troubles, recently, in managing their churches. The Manning troubles centered about the resignation of Dean Howard Chandler Robbins (TIME, Jan. 14). Many Robbins-supporters believe that the Dean resigned because Bishop Manning, with whose high-church views Dean Robbins did not entirely hold, was "autocratic." Bishop Garland in Philadelphia is not "high church." But last week, many a Philadelphian, pondering the parallel, wondered if it was not a fear of "autocracy" that was keeping potential...
...HOWARD, Chairman of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers: "The death of Briton Hadden robs American journalism of one of its greatest promises. His youthful viewpoint struck a new note and a wholesome one. His co-workers will carry on the success he helped achieve, but the task will be heavier despite their determination to make good his absence from their ranks...