Word: ithaca
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Cornell's band, 20 men smaller than usual, will not feature a co-ed as drum-majorette, contrary to popular rumor. "The age-old tradition of Cornell is against having co-eds in the band," barked Captain Williamson, R.O.T.C. officer at Ithaca and band mentor. "There aren't any girls in the band, anyway!" Captain Williamson declined to reveal any more of the Big Red's musical plans than that they were "going through a lot of formations." Besides, he had to attend the rally...
...director, and of which for more than fifteen years he was the largest stockholder. Then, financially secure, he turned to public affairs and became trustee of the infantile State Agricultural College just founded at Ovid, N. Y. He nourished the little school with $300,000 and moved it to Ithaca. Alike in appearance to Arthur Train's venerable Ephraim Tutt, of Saturday Evening Post stories fame, Ezra's tall, spare figure, set off with frock coat and shiny stovepipe hat, was a familiar sight on the campus. His checks and gifts were also familiar--and welcome...
Fifteen hundred Cornell seats within the goal lines will go on sale tomorrow morning at the H.A.A. office. The ducats are really Cornell seats, for the number represents the amount returned from Ithaca after the Big Red boys had all they wanted. Nearly 500 of the seats are within the 20-yard stripes...
...Hampshire; Bliss Fund to Arthur E. MacGregor, of Needham; Bliss Fund and University Scholarship to Cammann H. Niederhof, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Bliss fund and University Scholarship to Jonathan W. Wright, of Spokane, Washington; Graduate Fellowships in Government to Edgar J. Kemler, of Baltimore, Maryland, Frederick H. Bullen, of Ithaca, and Charles B. Stauffacher, of Washington, D.C.; John Harvard Fellowships to Wilfred Kaplan, of Jamaica Plain, and Edward A. Robinson, of New York City; Shattuck Scholarship to James C.Abbott, of Melrose; Thayer Fellowship and University Fellowship to Herbert Sprince, of Lewiston, Maine; University Fellowships to Willard D. Arant, of Cambridge; William...
Died. George Frederick Warren, 64, once (1933-34) Franklin Roosevelt's monetary adviser and champion of the ''rubber dollar"; after long illness; in Ithaca, N. Y. He left Washington quietly in 1934, returned to his teaching post at Cornell University, from which he had planned to retire on June...