Word: parkes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Jack D. Andrews, of La Crosse, Wisconsin; Alan S. Evans, of Ridley Park, Pennsylvania; William R. Eyler, of Toledo, Ohio; Richard B. Finn, of Niagara Falls, New York; Ralph T. Fuller, of Hudson Ohio; Frederick W. Heckel, 3d., of Wrightsville, Pennsylvania; Lawrence M. Levinson, of Chattanooga, Tennessee; Allen E. Puckett, of Chicago Heights, Illinois; Joseph S. Harvin, of Fort Worth, Texas; Walter J. Bate, of Richmond, Indiana; Richard R. Beatty, Jr., of Kansas City, Missouri, Clayton J. Clawson, of Madera, California; Edger L. Haff, Jr., of Fort Edward, New York; Martin Lichterman, of Brooklyn, New York; William W. Minton...
Robert Carlton Hall '36 will preside, and the three judges will be: the Reverend Charles Edwards Park, Minister of the First Church, Unitarian, in Boston; Henry W. Holmes '03, Dean of the Graduate School of Education; and Newell C. Maynard, professor of Public Speaking at Tufts College. Charles Towns end Copeland, Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, emeritus, will be Honorary Judge...
...made her maiden Congressional speech, not on the Senate floor but in the privacy of a Public Lands Committee hearing. In pleasant contrast to the loud histrionics of her late husband & predecessor, it was a mild little plea for the passage of a bill to enlarge Chalmette National Historical Park, on the site of the Battle of New Orleans. "Had we not won that battle," said Widow Long of the great victory which Andrew Jackson won 15 days after the War of 1812 was over, "we would today have a British colony west of the Mississippi...
Many prominent figures in education will testify, including President Stanley King of Amherst, President J. Edgar Park of Wheaton College, Headmaster Claude M. Fuess of Andover, and Miss Dorothy Waldo, head of Dana Hall School for Girls in Wellesley and President of the Massachusetts Private School Association...
...King of Burlesque" catches Warner Baxter between a crusty society dame (Mona Barrie) and poor, but nonetheless faithful, love (Alice Faye). True love wins out in the end, of course, for while Park Avenue wilts him and jilts him, love makes a fortune dancing in London and stakes him to his theatrical comeback. Though the plot creaks mildly in spots, the cracks of Jack Oakie, the dancing of Alice Faye, and several good songs ("I've Got My Fingers Crossed," "I'm Shooting High") manage to hold it together for the final embrace. But we would not care to dine...