Word: marylanders
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...native of Annspolis, Maryland, Magruder graduated cum laude from the Harvard Law School in 1916. From 1916 to 1917 he served as secretary to Mr. Justice Brandeis. He became professor at the Law School in 1925, at the age of 32, and vice-dean...
...Aurora race track. This winter, still an "apprentice," he outrode his most experienced rivals at the Fair Grounds in New Orleans, then moved on to Bowie to lead the field there as well. Last week, on closing day at Bowie, Jockey Oros put on as exciting a show for Maryland racegoers as Don Meade had ever given Hialeah patrons. With a leg up on six mounts, he won three races (including the Daily Double), finished in the money with the other three. His triple brought lis string of victories to 105 since January 1-14 more than Meade, his nearest...
...Bingo as a means of raising money. He heard that priests in Trenton, N. J. defied police attempting to enforce the law against gambling, were backed up by a grand jury; that "bingo-mad" women in Detroit hissed, hooted, flew at raiding police; that in Michigan, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Maryland, legislators were urged to legalize games like Bingo...
Before 125 students, educators, and government officials attending the fourth annual H-y-P Conference on Public Affairs, the anti-New Deal Maryland Senator warned that when organized minorities stampede legislators into "meddling and hindering the private initiative of the people, logic and good government fall by the wayside...
Last week some Maryland chemists (the Maryland section of the American Chemical Society) stuck their collective neck out. To entertain fellow chemists, meeting in Baltimore, they staged a show the like of which no chemist or choreographer had ever seen-a "chemical ballet." The theory was that the formation, movement and dissociation of molecules, the nuclear spins of electrons, etc., could be represented by appropriate music and dancing. The music was written by Dr. Donald Hatch Andrews, a musically inclined chemistry professor at Johns Hopkins, in collaboration with one of his students. The choreography was arranged by Carol Lynn Fetser...