Word: sons
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...more than 50 years President Eliot was a regular attendant of the First Parish Church which is directly opposite the Johnston Gate and Massachusetts Hall. He was a lifelong and ardent Unitarian, and his son, Rev. S. A. Eliot '84 is President of the American Unitarian Association...
...cast has been definitely selected with the exception of one or two minor roles. The cast of characters, as announced last night, follows. Caspar, Murray Pease 1G. Melchior, D. W. Moreland '28 Balthayar, R. H. James '30 Herod, D. T. Dickson '27 Herod's Son, A. T. Black '30 Herod's Messenger, Henry Fox '27 High Priest, G. K. Bishop '27 Second Priest, Charles Leatherbee '29 Joseph, R. D. Back Occ. Mary, Helen Lewis Gabriel, Rhodita Edwards First Old Wife, Helen Field Second Old Wife Constance Templeton Choristers, J. W. Knidder 2G., Edward Ranouf, Richard MacMullen, James MacMullen...
...remained for a son of my own college to take the palms, two Morris chairs, and the family silver. He was more than good: he was better. Although his diction shows contact with chronic dyspepsia, his range is excellent. In truth when he eclipsed high C. I. was ready to compare him with the Romanticists of the Early Pleistocene. Nor does he lack gesture. He should illustrate for Milt Gross. His name? I think it is Sheridan. And like his great namesake he has rivals...
...Manhattan newspaper, married and soon set out to be his own literary boss. Painstaking and deliberate, he fixed upon Author Booth Tarkington as an object for deep admiration and their subsequent friendship had much to do with the Streets' removal to Princeton when it came time for their son to attend college. There, pensively fingering cigars, graciously suffering undergraduate interruptions, Julian Street produced his famed Rita Coventry and the O. Henry Memorial Prize story for 1925, Mr. Bisbee's Princess...
...have been conducted under the supervision of the late Commander John Rodgers, hero of the Navy flight last year (TIME, Sept. 14, 1925), in a PN9 from California to Hawaii. After Commander Rodgers' ironic death (TIME, Sept. 6), the leadership had passed to Flight Commander Harold T. Bartlett, son of a Connecticut schoolmaster, seconded by Lieut. Byron J. Connell, son of a Monongahela River lockmaster. With these two in the planes numbered for convenience 1 and 2, flew five others, including veterans of the transatlantic flight of the NC-4, the Hawaiian flight and René Fonck...