Word: patterson
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Welch; 5, Barnes; 4, Bremer; 3, Dickinson; 2, Perkins; bow, Russell; Eliot House: Stroke, Winthrop; 7, Feichter; 6, Walcott; 5, White; 4, Hepburn; 3, Fabyan; 2, Young; bow, Adelsheim; cox., Quinby. Lowell House: Stroke, Wells; 7, Hatch; 6, McElheny; 5, Verman; 4, Morgan; 3, Fetcher; 2, Hoppin; bow, Patterson; cox., Thayer. Winthrop House; Stroke, Wells; 7, Garrigues; 6, Nichols; 5, Carman; 4, Dubois; 3, Walker; 2, Bampton; bow, England; cox., Winn...
...Washington Correspondent William Hard (Consolidated Press As-sociation), staff worker on FORTUNE; and Gerard Kirsopp Lake, Manhattan textile man, son of Professor Kirsopp Lake (Ecclesiastical History) of Harvard; in Washington. A wedding guest: Mrs. Herbert Hoover. Bride's attendant: Countess Felicia Gizycka, daughter of Editrix Eleanor Medill Patterson of Hearst's Washington Herald...
Dedicating the four new courts on Divinity Avenue, the University fall tennis tournament will start on Monday. Prominent among the entrants are W. N. Patterson '32, who played number six last spring, D. M. Frame '32, playing number four on the University squad, J. M. Barnaby '33, and W. C. Thompson '32, both alternates. The trophy for the winner of the winner of the tournament is the Jackson Cup, now held by H. M. Coggesliall 2L. The tournament will be held on the Divinity Avenue courts which have been recently resurfaced to dry quickly...
...last week continued to be adverse but there was one shining exception. National Cash Register Co. ordered a payment of 37½? on its A stock. This stock is entitled to $3 a year in cumulative dividends, then participates with the B stock (largely held by President Frederick Beck Patterson) after the latter receives $3. During 1929 and 1930, A holders received $4 a share but last March the dividend was passed...
Many a reader of the McCormick-Patterson tabloid New York Daily News, like many a reader of any newspaper, skips the editorials. But one day last week the News's editorial column was calculated to arrest the most cursory eye. On it appeared the picture of a pudgy male, clad only in underdrawers, squatting Gandhi-fashion at a spinning wheel. The body was the body of any corpulent, middle-aged man but the head was the head of Herbert Hoover...