Word: iii
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Howard Finney, III--Freshman Football; J.V. Football; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Baseball; House Athletics; William Paine LaCroix Award...
Schedules to testify tomorrow before the committee, chaired by Harold H. Velde (R-III.) are ex-Communist Granville Hicks '23, a teaching fellow in American History here in 1938-39, and Daniel J. Boorstin '34, associate professor of American History at the University of Chicago and one of the men on Davis' list...
...barring reporters from the trial of Minot ("Mickey") Jelke III, on charges of being a pimp, Manhattan Judge Francis Valente apparently expected to keep testimony from the sensational vice case out of the newspapers. The trial had not gone two days before Judge Valente had an ample opportunity to see how wrong he was in practice, if not in law. Elaborately shrouded in secrecy, the trial took on an importance it might never have had in open court. In Louisville, a panel of clergymen on radio debated whether the press should be allowed to cover the trial, decided that...
...sense of amazed disgust that I road of this $250,000 business in this morning's CRIMSON. I hope many of your readers will express themselves on this matter in greater detail and better English what I can only say this way: Robertson's proposal stinks. Walter S. Rosenberry III...
...case of Minot ("Mickey") Jelke III, 23, newsmen from papers all over the world had a story made for them. Jelke, a socialite heir to a multimillion dollar fortune, was accused of managing a circle of glamorous prostitutes who operated in Manhattan's glossiest nightspots and, for that matter, around the world (TIME, Feb. 2). This week, as the press warmed up for the first headline-making days of the trial, reporters got an unexpected and bitter piece of news...