Word: patricks
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...hand but have favored bad legs and been kept out of active scrimmaging. Up from last year's Jayvees have come Charlie Bellows, Ren Russell, and Bill Lovering to bolster the defense squad, while Hans Carstein, Dick Howe, and Frank Eaton are seeking places on the foreward line. Joe Patrick, Freddie DeRham, Pete Stone and Jack Cunningham have shown up best so far from the large group of Sophomores who have already turned...
...monastic laymen), St. Mary's slowly declined, was on its last legs when the War emptied its classrooms. In 1920 the University of California overwhelmed its puny football team 127-to-0. Smarting, little St. Mary's next year hired a young Notre Dame graduate, Edward Patrick ("Slip") Madian, as football coach. Slip Madigan began to turn out teams which, since 1924, have won 86 and tied seven of their 114 games against some of the best football brains & brawn in the U. S. In 1928 the Brothers felt so good they sold the College...
Married. Alicia Tumulty, daughter of Joseph Patrick Tumulty, private secretary to President Woodrow Wilson; and John Donnelly, of Boston; in Washington...
...employers were suing to stop her from fulfilling a $50,000 British film engagement. "As this contract stands," pleaded her lawyer, "Miss Davis could not become a waitress in a restaurant or an assistant in a hair dresser's shop in the wilds of Africa. . . ." Observed Sir Patrick Hastings, bewigged barrister for Vice President Jack Leonard Warner: "She is a rather naughty young lady who wants more money." Snapped jaunty Bette Davis when the court ruled against her: "A real sock in the teeth...
Scripps-Howard's parent company entered Memphis 30 years ago with the Press. In 1926, the Press swallowed the News-Scimitar. Same year the powerful old morning Commercial Appeal aimed an Evening Appeal at the Press-Scimitar. Just before the Evening Appeal appeared, Editor & Publisher Charles Patrick Joseph Mooney suddenly died. Because Mr. Mooney had been a great & able editor, the Appeal papers languished without him. Promoters Luke Lea and Rogers ("We Bank on the South") Caldwell acquired the papers in 1927, milked them of cash, lost them to receivers when the Lea-Caldwell empire collapsed...