Word: pearsons
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Some of last year's veterans who are expected to report for the track and cross country squads are: E. B. Cole '32, N. P. Dodge '33, J. H. Pearson '32, J. B. Hawes '33, H. F. Kollmeyer '33, J. C. Grady '33, Oscar Sutermeister '32, and Newell Bent...
...sensational and trivial." Mark Sullivan has sunk into "a Republican propaganda medium." Clinton Wallace Gilbert "is one of the few nationally known Washington correspondents who has not compromised his personal or professional integrity, never fawned or groveled." The few other reporters who received praise-Messrs. Ross, Anderson, Pearson, Murphy et al.-are, by no great coincidence, members of the Georgetown Group...
Vexed members of the National Association of Audubon Societies hurled no sticks and stones but many a name at their President Thomas Gilbert Pearson last November (TIME, Nov. 3). They called him a killer, a caterer to wealthy sportsmen and potent gun companies, a steam roller. The names hurt President Pearson. After being reelected a director of the association, he appointed a committee to purge him of the bad names. On the committee were President Chauncy J. Hamlin of the Buffalo Museum of Science, Director Thomas Barbour of Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology, President Alexander Grant Ruthven...
President Ruthven soon found himself too busy with the students and professors at Ann Arbor and the legislators at Lansing to bother much with ruffled bird lovers in Manhattan. President Hamlin and Professor Barbour browsed among the charges and ruminated over the names against President Pearson until last week they had tart things to say of the Pearson baiters...
...investigators know that President Pearson has accepted money from manufacturers of small arms. But they "cannot agree that there is any moral turpitude in being a gunmaker. and believe frankly that shooting out-of-doors is a normal exercise of healthy and intelligent men, has been so for all time and will continue so to be. It is evident that the preservation of game is vitally dependent upon the interest of intelligent sportsmen more than upon any others...