Word: husbandly
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Forris Jewett Moore, of Cambridge, has given to the University in memory of her husband an endowment for a fellowship, carrying a stipend of $500. This aid, which will be known as the Forris Jewett Moore Fellowship in Organic Chemistry, will be awarded to assist some graduate of the University who has distinguished himself in that subject while an undergraduate and wishes to engage in further work in the field. The beneficiary is to be a member of the graduating class of the year preceding that in which he holds the fellowship. At the discretion of the University, the award...
Harvard received from the will of Mrs. Isaac Lothrop Rogers, of Brookline, two scholarships to be established in memory of the father and mother of her husband, the late Isaac Lothrop Rogers '81. The first of these scholarships, with a stipend of $500, will bear the name of Charles E. Rogers, and the second, with a similar income, will be known as the Martha Symmes Rogers Scholarship. These awards will be available to undergraduates of the College...
...week in 1915, when she was called the highest salaried woman in the world. Now, married to Douglas Fairbanks, she makes .over $1,000,000 per annum and makes special trips to Washington about her income tax. Shrewd, energetic, an able organizer, she keeps her husband's accounts, is the director of a bank and of several business corporations, collects signatures, likes-to watch athletes. When her famed curls were shortened to a bob last year in Manhattan by Barber Charles Bock, she put them in an envelope and took them home. Some of her pictures: The Poor Little...
...Newark, N. J., a Mrs. Mary Galabrese went into the mixing room of her husband's bakery, saw feet sticking from a stalled doughmixer, called police and firemen. The dead man was Gianto Darn, a worker in the bakery...
...cutting off of the lives of men and women no Asiatic conqueror, not Tamerlane, not Jenghiz Khan, can match his fame. . . . His purpose, to save the world: his method, to blow it up. . . . Apt at once to kill or to learn: . . . ruffianism and philanthropy: but a good husband; a gentle guest; happy, his biographers assure us, to wash up the dishes or dandle the baby; as mildly amused to stalk a capercailzie as to butcher an Emperor. . . . Lenin was the Grand Repudiator. He repudiated everything. He repudiated God, King, Country, morals, treaties, debts, rents, interest, the laws and customs...