Word: patricks
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...forward wall lettermen will fill over two lines. Since the football players have reported quite recently, there are not yet any definite indications as to just what the combinations will be. But it is safe to say that Johnny Mechem, Ned Cutter, George Roberts, Austie Harding, Ralph Pope, Joe Patrick, Win Jameson, and Pete Stone will figure in the first two or three combinations...
From 8:30 till 10:30 o'clock: Ivor Catlin, Hubert P. Earle, Robert A. Fearey, Patrick Henry, Christian A. Herter, Jr., Stacey B. Hulse, Jr., and Edward C. P. Thomas. From 10:30 till 12 o'clock; George P. Denny, Jr., John C. Glidden, John Grant, Daniel Ladd, Joseph P. Lyford, Carlton B. Swift, Jr., and Joseph W. Gardella...
Most Rev. Arthur Hinsley, 72, Archbishop of Westminster. Primate of 2,300,000 British Catholics. Since Pope Pius IX, in 1850, re-established the often suppressed British hierarchy, under Nicholas Patrick Stephen Cardinal Wiseman, the see of Westminster has traditionally been entitled to a cardinal. But Archbishop Hinsley, soon after his appointment to succeed the late Francis Cardinal Bourne in 1935, embarrassed the Church by his statements during the Italo-Ethiopian war. Replying energetically to the anti-Italian attacks of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Archbishop of Westminster announced that the Pope was powerless to intervene in the war because...
Shortly before 10:45 one night last week Patrick J. Corcoran, 45-year-old union chief of 12,000 American Federation of Labor drivers, rounded a corner near his home in the Bryn Mawr section of Minneapolis, suddenly turned to flee and slumped to the sidewalk with a bullet in his brain. At midnight neighbors discovered his snow-covered body. Mrs. Corcoran dashed from the house wailing: "It's Pat. I knew they...
...Noice, walked into the Star office, made known he was ready to tell police he had overheard a murder plotted in the cheap League of Nations beer parlor, but that the intended victim was not Corcoran but another labor leader. Soon Alderman A. G. Bastis revealed that not only Patrick Corcoran but four other labor leaders had been marked for death, that Corcoran himself knew he was in danger, that Rumorist Adams had merely printed what had been widely whispered in Twin City labor circles...