Word: raymonds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...them what they thought they deserved. Only remaining major holdouts last week were Yankee Pitcher Charles Ruffing who was demanding $1,000 more than the $16,000 Owner Jacob Ruppert thought he was worth, and First Baseman Adolph Camilli of the Phillies. Second symptom was a request by Representative Raymond J. Cannon of Wisconsin to U. S. Attorney General Homer Cummings to start anti-trust proceedings against owners of all organized U. S. baseball clubs on the grounds that they were operating a monopoly in restraint of trade...
Other Freshmen who played: Erik H. Allen, William H. Angoff, Joseph Bloom, Maurice S. Deeker, Jr., Raymond F. Farwell, Jr., Otto W. Fick, Jr., Robert Fleischer, William A. Garside, Hugh Harwood, John F. Hayward Jr., George M. Kahin, Jr., George V. Kaplan, James T. Kirby, Jr., William A. Macintyre, Jr., Roy W. Moore Jr., Willbur I. Moshenberg, Frederick V. O. Reilly, Gerald P. Rooser, Jr., win Ross, Edward H. Rack, Robin, Scully, Robert H. Shepard, Norman C. Updegraff...
...money given by undergraduates to the Council, are: Chester George Ormond '38, of Lancaster, Pennsylvania; William Bernhard Berssenbrugge '37, of Milwaukee; William Tucker Dean, Jr. '37, of Chicago; John Edward Ashley '37, of Daytona Beach, Florida; Charles Graham Roudabush '37, of Tampa, Florida; Charles Reder '38, of Pittsfield; Arthur Raymond Hartwig Occ., of Lawrence; Nathanael Augustus Lemke '38, of Milwaukee; John Jerome Cabitor '39, of Hartford, Connecticut; and Dino James Lewis '37, of Newport, Rhode Island...
With swift and decisive action last night the Student council threw itself into the melee occasioned by the virtual firing of Alan R. Sweezy '29, and J. Raymond Walsh, instructors in Economics. It voted 14-2 top sustain a resolution that political bias had not influenced either the Economics Department nor the Administration in the failure to promote Sweezy and Walsh...
...giving two year concluding appointments, University officials last week dismissed Alan R. Sweezy and J. Raymond Walsh, instructors in Economics. In answer to widespread question that the discharges might have been based on the outstanding liberal activities of the two men, a statement was issued explaining that the move had been made "solely on the grounds of teaching capacity and scholarly ability...