Word: newman
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Freshman Tea Dance in the Union. Dancing 5 to 7 o'clock. Music by Ruby Newman's orchestra...
Dance tickets will cost $1.25 for couples and $1.00 for stags Ruby Newman and his orchestra will supply music, but the size of the orchestra which he will use depends upon the number of seats sold. The Dance Committee, composed of J. M. Calloway, James B. Hallett, and Thomas H. Bilodeau, urges all Freshmen who intend coming to the Dance to buy their tickets immediately so that definite plans for the size of the orchestra can be made at an early date. The Committee also announced that the price of tickets will be advanced at the last minute...
...star footballers representing the Midwest: a game against the Pacific Coast, coached by Howard Jones of the University of Southern California, with seven of his last year's team in the lineup; 13 to 7, largely because of a brilliant performance by Michigan's Harry Newman, who returned punts for a total of 84 yd., threw a short pass to Ronzani of Marquette for the winning touchdown; under floodlights, in Soldier Field, Chicago. ¶Cecil Smith, famed cowboy poloist: the case brought against him by Nurse Eugenia Rose of the Evanston, Ill. Hospital, who accused him of raping...
...Keble's "National Apostasy" sermon electrified the Oxford Movement for which he, John Henry Newman and later Edward Bouverie Pusey worked. They yearned for order in ritual and discipline in the priesthood. They started a series of tracts, full of exaltation and theology, which ended with John Henry Newman trying to show that there was no real difference of form or theology between the Church of England and the Church of Rome. On the grounds that the Pope in Rome alone held the true Apostolic Succession from St. Peter, Newman withdrew from the Anglican Communion, later became a Cardinal...
...Tracts and Newman's conversion stirred up resounding piety and dissension in the Church of England and in the collateral Protestant Episcopal Church of the U. S. High-Churchmen in England and Anglo-Catholics in the U. S. wanted symbolism, celibacy and other "Romish" practices in their worship. Opposed were the Low-Churchmen and the plain Episcopalians, who detested every smack of Rome...