Word: lane
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...recipients of Non-Resident Scholarships in Massachusetts are: Robert A. Goldthwaite, Somerville; Richard A. Kaye, Brookline; Lauriat Lane, Jr., Cambridge; John J. McCullough, Arlington; Thaddeus K. Mroz, Salem; Kalman Novak, Cambridge; Raymond H. Ripley, Jr., Belmont; Arthur J. Torsiglieri, Boston; Amiel P. Van Teslaar, Boston; David M. Young, Jr., Quincy
...through Whitsun weekend, before rationing went into effect, there was a frantic scurry to stock up from pushcart peddlers and any stores that were open. In London's famed Petticoat Lane, 50,000 men and women surged around the Jewish street market, bought an estimated 500,000 coupons' worth of clothing...
...Hilda Flietz, RadcliffeHerbert W. Blanchard Sally West, BeaverBurton P. Block Evelyn O'Leary, MiltonThomas J. Carens Molly Hunter, WellesleyFrancis H. Caskin Mary Mercier, DanversRobert W. Chase Janet Nichols, WellesleyWalter A. Deane Martha Ann Lawton, Academic ModernoJames A. Doering Cornelia Weeks, SmithCharles A. Eberhardt Cynthia Carlisle, NewtonJohn D. Eusden Mildred Lane, WellesleyJohn C. Faulkner, III Polly Marshall, WheatonPhilip F. Fickett June Andrews, WellesleyFrank F. Goodman Jane Tupper, WellesleyStanley Gordon Elaine Robins, LazellDonald Harting Ann Rice, MiltonWilliam L. Hewes Mary Louise Shoemaker, Connecticut CollegeThomas C. Holyoke Mary Faunce, Jamaica PlainHarry L. Hosford, Jr. Bobsie Deming, The Day SchoolMarshall Hughes Ann Carpenter, Sarah...
...genius who has reversed more than 100,000 books during his brilliant career. The Testament has all the dope--pictures of Snooperman in the act, a full story of how libraries hermetically sealed were broken into, and an editorial entitle. "What are we going to do about it?" Dick Lane, the editor, with a loyal staff of underlings, has seen to it that the Testament has complete coverage of all events during the year...
...Petrovitch got a berth on WRUL, a 50,000-watt powerhouse, last fall. Conditions under which he agreed to operate were simple: a two-month trial at broadcasting three times a week, with no interference from anyone. Within three weeks, the State Department was advised by Arthur Bliss Lane, its Minister in Belgrade, that Dr. Petrovitch was becoming a potent force in Yugoslavia, that he ought to be aired every...