Word: snell
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Harriss '34, E.G. Helvenston '33, G.G. Johnson, Jr. '34, Robert Kramer, Jr. '35, D.L. Krupsaw '34, A.h. Levy '34, Edmund Liberman '33, R.A. McIninch '34, G.F. Oest '33, J.H. Phillips '35, R.H. Prew '33, J.B. Richards '34, William Rickel '34, A.G. Sanderson, Jr. '33, J.E. Shoemaker '35, E.M. Snell '35, M.M. Stearns '34, F.L. Steele, 3rd, '33, D.S. Tarbell '34, W.I. Tucker '33, J.B. White '34, A.W. Wilkinson '33, C.W. Williams '33, K.L. Myers...
...Haskins Everybody's Pepys John Joseph Hession Lowes: Road to Xanadu Robert Kramer Morison: Development of Harvard University Donald Vincent McGranahan Oxford Book of English Verse Thomas Burton O'Connor Thomson's Poems Leonard Raum Chesterfield's Letters to his Son Herbert Ellis Robbins Everybody's Boswell Edwin Marion Snell Johnson's Lives of the Poets Robert Wetmore Stoughton Shelley's Poems Arthur Wingate Todd Lemaitre: On the Margins of Old Books
...addition to Secretary Adams at Harvard, the Eastern Headquarters of the Republican National Committee are cooperating with the College Division in sending Cabinet Members and Republican leaders to the various colleges. Stimson is at Yale, Doak may come to Harvard later this month, Wilbur is at Princeton and Smith, Snell will appear at Amherst, and Mitchell is slated to talk at Columbia. Amherst, who is Advisory Chairman of the College Division of the east, has been arranging these schedules...
Onions & Demagogs. Republicans quickly hopped on the Topeka speech because Governor Roosevelt had offered no specific plan of relief. He was charged with being deliberately vague and misleading. Representative Snell pointed to the fact that Democrats from Speaker Garner down had pressed the Farm Board to undertake stabilization operations. Secretary of Agriculture Hyde observed: "My admiration for Al Smith rises higher with each new Roosevelt speech. Al not only knows his onions but his demagogs as well...
...speech. Sometimes it was real and spontaneous after he had worked up to a major point. More often it was ill-timed and artificial, a burst of irrational sound after a minor sentence. Leaders of the platform claque were observed to be National Chairman Sanders, Senator Moses, Representative Snell. Their insistent clapping and cheering gave a jerky, disconnected effect to the 7,000-word speech over which President Hoover had worked for weeks. "In accepting the great honor you have brought me." the President began in his plodding, somewhat mournful voice, "I desire to speak so simply and so plainly...