Word: knoxes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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This afternoon the A and B elevens from which Casey must pick a team to face Bates in the season's opener on October 3 will have their first stiff practice since Saturday, when they take the field against Coach Knox's Seconds. A C-team scrimmage with the Seconds yesterday resulted in one score. D. E. Peters '34 caught a punt on the Second's 35-yard stripe and wriggled through a broken field. Nevin kicked the extra point...
Connolly for Mason. A dapper little man with a lot of luggage walked across the gangplank of the Leviathan, Europe-bound. With the same proud little steps he had left the Hearst fold five days before. After the resignations of Col. William Franklin Knox from Hearst-papers' general managership and Editor Ray Long from Cosmopolitan Magazine (TIME, Dec. 29 et seq.), Frank Earl Mason was the third major executive to leave the Hearst banner in eight months...
...this emergency with a proclamation reducing the shooting season on ducks, geese, brant and coot from three months to one (see p. 51). ¶ Another White House proclamation: Fire Prevention Week (Oct. 4-10). ¶ To his Rapidan camp the President took for a week-end outing Publishers Frank Knox of the Chicago Daily News and Warren Fairbanks of the Indianapolis News. There he left them to their own amusement long enough to discuss arms limitation with Assistant Secretary of State Rogers, anti-trust laws with Assistant Attorney General O'Brian. In circulation last week was a pamphlet published...
...first 117 years of the country's history Secretaries of State stayed at home, conducted all foreign negotiations from the nation's capital. First to break this tradition was Elihu Root who attended a Pan-American Conference at Rio de Janeiro in 1906. Philander Chase Knox six years later toured Central and South America to soothe Latin suspicions of "dollar diplomacy." Robert Lansing attended the Paris peace conference in 1919, Charles Evans...
Publisher Knox also told his staff that William Randolph Hearst had no financial interest in the purchase of the News. That was not surprising. In the News's full page of congratulatory messages to the new publisher there were greetings from nearly every famed publisher in the U. S., even a telegram from President Hoover, but no word from Mr. Hearst. Even more eloquent was a comparison of news accounts in Manhattan dailies. The Times printed a column-and-a-half story and an editorial on the Knox purchase. The Herald Tribune and Sun gave more than half...