Word: l
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Representing the HYRC at the conference were Jay Jansen '50, president of the Club and chairman of the delegation; Arthur W. Bingham '51, vice-president; William Gribble '50, secretary; Sanford Langa '51, operations director; A. John Klingel, Jr. '52; publicity director; Fred L. True 2L of the planning board; Charles L. McWhorter 3L, John Easton '47, Earl Kulp '52, James O'Reilly '50, John Luce '52, and Douglas McCallum...
...President's desk fattened with candidates for Government jobs, there was a painful shortage of iron men with elephant hides. There was no stampede of qualified men for Royall's $15,000 job, or the $10,000 under secretaryship abandoned by William H. Draper. Navy Secretary John L. Sullivan ($15,000) and his Under Secretary W. John Kenney ($10,000) were thinking of leaving, too. There were two $15,000 openings on the Atomic Energy Commission (former Iowa editor W. W. Waymack had left, Physicist Robert Bacher had submitted his resignation). Admiral W. W. Smith...
They had two children,* wrote and made their living as free-lance journalists and translators. Muñoz contributed to the New Republic, the Nation, the Baltimore Sun and Henry L. Mencken's Smart Set and American Mercury. Of his poetry Muñoz now says: "It stinks...
...constellation Cetus (the Whale), the twin stars will be known to astronomers as L 726-8 (L for Luyten, the figures to indicate position in the sky). Both stars are red and much cooler than the sun, which gives out 40,000 times as much light as one unit, 60,000 times as much as the other. The twins revolve around each other every 20 to 25 years, keeping about 275 million miles apart...
Tyson garnered 132 votes, leading second place Donald L. Bornstein '50 by 13. The other three candidates followed closely...