Word: pennington
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...oppose Harvard-Yale and Princeton-Cornell, generally shine in the running events but are defeated because of poor performances in the field events. Publicized as the strongest group ever sent, this year's Oxford-Cambridge team proved unusually well-balanced. Relying on both team "Presidents" (captains), Alan Pennington (Oxford) and Godfrey Brown (Cambridge), for double wins, the Britishers had unbeatable talent on the track except in the hurdles. In the field they boasted a Turk who could shot-put 49 ft., a high-jumper who could clear 6 ft. 3 in., and Frederick Richard Webster, first Briton ever...
...well. In the high jump and shot put Cambridge's Robert Kirk Inches Kennedy and Ali Irfan of Istanbul set new meet records. And Cambridge's Webster topped Princeton's Standish Medina, suffering from a pulled leg muscle, with a 13-ft. pole-vault. Though President Pennington took the 100 and 220-yd. sprints handily and President Brown breezed to victory in the quarter mile, these three victories in the field > proved invaluable when Princeton-Cornell proceeded to win both the mile and two-mile runs to bring their total to five firsts. As at Cambridge fortnight...
...public service tomorrow evening will be held by the Reverend Palfrey Perkins, Minister of King's Chapel, Boston. The service this afternoon will be conducted by the Reverend C. Leslie Glenn, Rector of Christ Church, Cambridge; while tomorrow's service will be conducted by the Reverend Leslie T. Pennington, Minister of the Christ Church in Cambridge, Unitarian...
...Reverend Leslie T. Pennington Minister of the First Church in Cambridge, Unitarian, will conduct the services on Tuesday afternoon. All children of families connected with the University, if accompanied by an older person, are invited to this service, which is open to the public. The Reverend Palfrey Perkins, Minister of King's Chapel, Boston, will conduct the service on Tuesday evening, to which the public is invited...
...last to testify before it. In 1934 he objected to the proposed Philadelphia Co. reorganization as ''a gigantic racket engineered by insiders." Subsequently he approved it, became a director. Also omitted from the true bills were Joseph E. Widener, who was a Philadelphia Co. director, and Clerk Pennington who signed the worthless bonds...