Word: samuel
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...learn a lot. Everyone got to use power tools and sledge hammers," says Samuel Esquith '00, co-director of Habitat for Humanity, a program under the Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA...
...November 1997, the presidential and vice presidential elections, several candidates advocated practicality over politics. Beth A. Stewart '00 and Samuel C. Cohen '00 ran for office on a platform of "depoliticizing" the council. Stewart and Cohen took a new approach, advocating student services and increased support for student groups...
...January of this year, the council was fighting of frozen yogurt under President Beth A. Stewart '00 and Vice President Samuel C. Cohen '00, who broke a recent tread of progressivism with an emphasis on student serves (see sidebar, page...
...France to England. One is his image of a pushy American social locomotive, Virginie Gautreau, all twisting, mannered pose and lunar, greenish-white skin, identified only as Madame X. The French critics and public hated it--and her. The other is a painting of a fashionable gynecologist named Dr. Samuel Pozzi, renowned in Paris for his exquisite tastes and the breadth of his affairs, including one with Mme. Gautreau. He rises before one's eyes in a flaring crimson robe with a velvet curtain behind him, one hand on his breast, looking like some 16th-arrondissement Don Giovanni protesting...
History should take note of Farnsworth's reaction. After all, we learn in school that Samuel Morse's first telegraph message was "What hath God wrought?" Edison spoke into his phonograph, "Mary had a little lamb." And Don Ameche--I mean, Alexander Graham Bell--shouted for assistance: "Mr. Watson, come here, I need you!" What did Farnsworth exclaim? "There you are," said Phil, "electronic television." Later that evening, he wrote in his laboratory journal: "The received line picture was evident this time." Not very catchy for a climactic scene in a movie. Perhaps we could use the telegram George Everson...