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...named are LeBaron Russell Barker Jr. of Plymouth; Thayer Cumings of New York City; George Douglass Debevoise of New York City; Frederick Strong Moseley Jr. of Boston; Edward Reed Nash, of Brookline; John Louis Newell Jr. of Brookline; William Ichabod Nichols '26 of Wilton, Conn.; and William Thomas Reid 3d of Brookline...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ASSISTANT HEAD USHERS FOR CLASS DAY CHOSEN BY FIELD | 5/23/1925 | See Source »

...remainder of the men who survived the cut follows: C. E. Baldwin 26, C. H. Bradford '26, E. H. Bradford Jr. '26, E. C. Clark '27, E. S. Daniell '26, M. L. Donaldson '26, F. B. Hayne '26, B. L. Kilgour '27, W. B. Macomber '26, F. S. Moseley '27, E. R. Nash '26, H. I. Pratt '26, B. R. Taylor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SPRING GRID SQUAD SLASHED TO 27 MEN | 5/1/1925 | See Source »

...Henry Parish 2nd, Chairman, Miss Virginia Gardner; J. W. Adie, Miss Theodora Ayer: C. L. Harding Jr., Miss Mary Chester: F. S. Moseley Jr., Miss Susan Mellen: H. I. Pratt, Miss Constance Miller; R. D. Tucker, Miss Minnie Brokaw; V. F. Righter, Miss Elizabeth Sprague; Albert Tilt Jr., Miss Helen Lovering: F. L. Dabney, Miss Phyllis Thompson...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANNOUNCE BOX LISTS FOR JUNIOR FESTIVITY | 3/4/1925 | See Source »

...December, George F. Willett, banker of Norwood, Mass., sued the Boston banking firms of F. S. Moseley & Co., Killer, Peabody & Co. and Robert F. Herrick, Boston lawyer, for $15,000,000. He claimed that these had conspired to rob his onetime firm, Willett, Sears & Co., of the control of two felt companies. After the longest superior court trial on record (184 days), he got a verdict of $10,534,109.00-the largest judgment ever awarded by a court to an individual (TIME, Dec. 29). When he received news that he had won back this fortune, Mr. Willett...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Plaintiff Willett | 2/23/1925 | See Source »

...prize play for last year, Hatcher Hughes presented a light comedy in a remarkable setting among Southern mountaineers. In the November issue of "The Forum" is published that magazine's prize short story for 1924, which also has a Southern theme. "The Secret at the Cross-roads", as Jefferson Moseley has called his play, deals with the race question, not as a theorist searching for causes, but as a writer of clear vision dealing with facts...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GOING SOUTH | 10/22/1924 | See Source »

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