Word: marylanders
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Announcement of the election of Thomas W. Wright, '41, as captain of the Freshman fencing team was made yesterday afternoon. Wright, a resident of Chevy Chase, Maryland, lives in Wigglesworth J-22 at college...
when snow disappears the stickmen will be the first spring squad to get outside as they must capitalize every minute in order to be prepared for three stiff games during the spring vacation. This year they will take on Penn, Navy, and Maryland down in the heart of the lacrosse country. The schedule of the trip is as follows: April 5, Penn; April 7, Maryland; April 9, Navy...
...stop was at Norris, Tenn., where the youngsters spent three days marveling at Norris Dam and affiliated housing projects, hearing about TYA from Director David Eli Lilienthal and his aides. Later, the party saw the New Deal's rural electrification projects in Virginia, its Greenbelt resettlement development in Maryland. In the meantime. Lincoln's students had also spent a day looking over a Georgia Power Co. plant at Tallulah Falls, Ga.. listening to the private power companies' side of the Government-v.-private power story...
...Senators, all Democrats, charged their Administration with spending money to ridicule them. The offender was the WPA's Federal Theatre production about slum clearance, ". . . one third of a nation'' (TIME, Jan. 31). The offense was casting Senators Andrews of Florida, Byrd of Virginia and Tydings of Maryland as mild critics of the Wagner-Steagall Housing Bill. The Senators complained that their impersonators on the stage called forth boos & hisses. As their remarks came straight out of the Congressional Record, they admitted they had not been misquoted, but insisted they were not quoted fairly. In the play Byrd...
...each evening and Sunday. But lately it has been losing advertising to the Tennessean-in receivership for four years before Silliman Evans bought it last March-published each morning, evening and Sunday. To end a ruinous circulation and advertising fight between their rival papers, Mr. Evans, also chairman of Maryland Casualty Co., and Mr. Stahlman have formed Newspaper Printing Corp. which will solicit advertising, print and distribute both papers from a new $150,000 building. Each paper owns half the stock in the operating company, of which Mr. Stahlman is chairman, Mr. Evans president. Competition ceases, for the Tennessean...