Word: piere
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...members of the executive committee were elected at the meeting: Richard H. Kuhike 1G, president, Arthur R. Humphreys 2G, secretary, Hollis B. Hill '35, Arthur S. Pier '35, Alfred Pope '36, Peter R. Viereck...
...Derrickson '35, Joseph K. Gilligan '36, William H. M. Glazier '36, Nathaniel M. Goodhue '36, Henry O. Marcy '37, Roger B. Martin '37, William C. McCarthy '35, Samuel L. Miller '37, John Ney '35, John R. O'Neill '36, Louis H. Orr '36, Thomas L. Perry '37, Arthur S. Pier '37, Arthur H. Rice '34, Ed S. Roys '36, David W. Schoonmaker '36, William S. Shrader '37, Arthur C. Sullivan '36, Arthur W. Todd '35, and Aronsen A. Vitagliano...
Leverett House: Richard G. Fletcher, Jr. '35; Chairman; Arthur S. Pier, Jr. '35; Stephen H. Tyng '35; John S. Howe '36; Charles S. Kelley, 3rd '36; Robert H. Rawson...
Wednesday evening the twin-screw turbo-electric liner Morro Castle, 11,500 tons, lay at her Ward Line pier in Havana. In her hold was a cargo of 750 tons of perishable fruit. She was manned by a crew of 240. And up her gangway, in little groups chattering about their Cuban purchases, trooped 318 passengers. Most of them were U. S. vacationists on a week's southern cruise and few of them were distinguished persons. The Morro Castle was warped into the roadstead, stood out of the harbor, bound for New York, three days away...
...into Manhattan and Chinatown went wild. Rich merchants had hired a suite for their hero at the tall-towered Waldorf-Astoria. They sent three planes with Chinese pilots roaring down the bay to dip and zoom in welcome. As the Olympic drew in, 4,000 jubilant celestials jammed the pier and Chinese drivers of a motorcade of 200 cars pushed down the buttons of their horns, kept them down...