Word: matthew
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Sometimes the customers drink in my presence. . . . Usually when they hear what I have to say the drinking stops, for I always say to the bartender or the owner: 'Aren't you ashamed to be in such a contemptible business?' " Amos (Freeman F. Gosden) and President Matthew Scott Sloan of New York Edison Co. were guests of Bernard Gimbel, department-store man, at a luncheon in Manhattan. Chaffed Tycoon Sloan: "Now tell us, what made Madame Queen faint in the courtroom?" Retorted Amos: "She saw her electric light bill...
...House team was: Burke, r.f.; O. D. Johnson '31, l.f.; A. E: Taylor '33, c; J. B. Howard '33, r.g.; C. L. Sommers '31, l.g.; with R. W. Moore '33, J. F. Faude '31, and Howard Berstein '33, as substitutes. On the Dunster squad were: E. C. Pugh '33, Matthew Hale '33, T. G. Upton '31, King Upton '32, S. P. Duggan '31, O. E. Fuerbringer '32, J. S. Plaut '33, and Schumacher...
Patronesses for the dance will include the following: Mesdames W. F. Beach, P. P. Chase, J. L. Coolidge, Hallowell Davis, A. T. Davison, W. Y. Elliott, E. S. Emery, A. L. Endicott, R. W. Hale, W. T. Ham, A. C. Hanford, P. M. Herzog, Matthew Luce, D. T. W. McCord, R. B. Merriman, C. H. Moore, Eliot Perkins, A. L. Putnam, E. K. Rand, Harlow Shapley, W. L. Sperry, A. N. Whitehead, and B. J. Whiting...
...following ladies have been requested to serve as patronesses: Mesdames W. E. Beach, R. P. Blake, P. P. Chase, J. L. Coolidge, Hallowell Davis, A. T. Davison, W. Y. Elliott, E. S. Emery, A. L. Endicott, R. W. Hale, W. T. Ham, A. C. Hanford, P. M. Herzog, Matthew Luce, D. T. W. McCord, R. B. Merriman, C. H. Moore, Eliot Perkins, A. L. Putnam, E. K. Rand, Harlow Shapley, W. L. Sperry, A. N. Whitehead, and B. J. Whiting. Of the residents of the house, the following men will serve as a floor committee: E. S. Amazeen '31, Garrett...
...lectures by H. W. Garrod, Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry, will be presented in a volume entitled "Poetry and the Criticism of Life". Professor Garrod centers his criticism chiefly around the work of Matthew Arnold, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Arthur Hugh Clough. A striking analysis of Robert Bridges' "Testament of Beauty" is included...