Word: parks
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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William L. Copithorne '38, Somerville; Nicholas J. Cotsonas, Jr. '40, Roxbury; Edward M. Davis, Jr. '40, Winter Park, Florida; Joseph T. Doyle '39, Providence, Rhode Island; Elmer A. Evans '38, Dorchester; Milton Gold '38, New York; James A. Hamill '38, Quincy; Robert B. Hayden '40, Newtonville; Charles A. Kane '39, Roslindale...
...been announced that the following have won scholarships: John B. Addington, East Aurora, Ill.; John F. Ambrose, Ozone Park, N. Y.; Nathan Belfer, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Harry E. von Bergen, Roslindale, Mass.; Milliam A. Betz, Columbia, Mo.; Robert M. Boyd, New York, N. Y.; John K. Bragg, Charleston, S. C.; John C. Brechin, Bristol, R. I.; Loring T. Briggs, Taunton, Mass.; Ferdinand F. Bruck, Bonn Rhein, Germany; John P. R. Budlong, East Greenwich, R. I.; Myron I. Burnes, Brookline, Mass...
...second. When it is all over and the debentures have been paid off, President Whalen and associates expect to have a surplus of about $8,000,000 which will go to the Comptroller of the City of New York for charities and improving Flushing Meadows Park. New York businessmen will already have received their share of the booty from the $50,000,000 a year Fair patrons are expected to spend at the Fair, the $1,000,000,000 they will spend in the City itself...
...remuneration. New York City is crashing through with about $25,000,000, New York State with $10,000,000, but this is not a subsidy, for a large part of the money is being spent in basic improvements and reclamation of the Fair site which will be a park when the Fair is ended. The U. S. Government has authorized expenditure c. $3,000,000 and the Fair Corporation itself plans to spend about $47,000,000, part financed by Fair revenues, the rest by a $27,800,000 issue of 4% debentures which has been completely taken...
...Howard climbs slowly back to fortune by way of unpaid radio appearances in Los Angeles, a chance to fill in during an operatic emergency, a role in a cheap movie that turns into a hit. When he is on top of the world again, with Juana in a Gramercy Park hideaway in Manhattan, his evil genius appears-a suave, wealthy, possessive conductor and music patron named Hawes. Although Howard struggles in increasing panic, Juana guesses what is wrong, learns that Hawes had been obscurely responsible for his previous decline, tells him contemptuously that only men can sing. Treating bluntly...