Word: rollins
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...coffin on wheels. Today, after more than 27 years with the Post-Dispatch, sandy-haired, white-mustached Fitzpatrick is one of the four top-rank daily political cartoonists of the U.S. and the most belligerently individualistic of the four. (The other three: the New York Post's Rollin Kirby, the Baltimore Sun's Edmund Duffy, Scripps-Howard's Harold M. Talburt.) Behind the scenes at the Post-Dispatch his editorial opinions sometimes clash with those of his bosses, Publisher Joseph Pulitzer and Editor Ralph Coghlan...
...Tackles Rollin Fisher, a 200-pounder from Andover, and the son of Robert P. Fisher, who coached Varsity elevens from 1919 to 1925, and George Hibbard, a 218-pound Brookline High product, bolster a line which seems lighter than usual. Charles Cowen, a fullback from Exeter, and Walter Wilson, Mercersburg halfback, are backfield candidates with fine prep school athletic records
...fill Mandel's place at the Ministry of Colonies, the Premier shifted Louis Rollin from the Ministry of Commerce. As new Minister of Commerce he chose Leon Barety, an exponent of closer relations with Italy. To the key post of permanent Secretary General of Foreign Affairs, since 1933 occupied by Alexis Leger ("greatest living diplomat"), Premier Reynaud appointed Frangois Charles-Roux, envoy to the Vatican, an expert on Papal foreign policy...
When The Players revived it in Manhattan in 1933, Critic Percy Hammond claimed he detected tears in the eyes of such sophisticates as Edna Ferber, Rollin Kirby, Katharine Hepburn...
...Freshman bolo team defeated Artillery 15-3. Saturday night is the Commonwealth Armory. The '43 team consisted of Nate Greer, Bob White, and Rollin Thompson...