Word: stanleys
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...party seems to have started in Alling's room on December 29, 1676, when Onosephoeus Stanley, presumably a friend but no in Harvard, "came in to his chamber, sometime in the forenoon and so continued there until 3 or 4 or ye clock in ye afternoon. During which time...they had cider fetch(ed) in by ...Ailing... as he judgeth in all about 3 qts. for which they paid 2d a quart." Barnard, the other Freshman, stopped in to see Alling and "found they had some rum, which they had been drinking of." Another pint was soon required and sent...
...testimony of Stanley, who signed with a cross since he, like all the girls and a few of the good burghers of the town, was unable to sign his name, reveals another visit to the College on January 3, with James Alling, the willing Freshman, fetching the pint to be again "mixt with sugar and water." The action of the college seems to have stopped with the slight fine imposed by Danforth in his capacity as justice of the peace. It is due to the investigation made necessary by the more serious scandals concerning the activities of Mary Ruggles, Hannah...
Second basses: John Bovey '35, Robert C. Creel '34, John B. Hamblet '35, Henry E. Holm '34, Albert B. Lord '34, Morton A. Mergentheim 1L, John M. Mitchell '36, Marcy S. Powell 3G., Stanley C. Salmen '36, Robert E. Simon '35, Robert A. Sutermeister '34, Norman E. Vuilleumier '35, Clement W. Welsh...
Contrary to general expectation, the Harvard Jayvee football team completely swamped the Yale Junior Varsity by the overwhelming score of 31-0 yesterday at Soldiers Field. Many spectacular runs and plays featured Harvard's attack which the Bulldogs were totally incompetent to withstand. Victory began to form when Stanley X. Hausen '34 caught a wild pass from Paul deB. deGive '34 with one hand for the first score. Braman Gibbs '36 kicked the point. In the third period the slaughter began again when Gibbs swept right end for the second touchdown, but the real smash came in the fourth period...
...Morgan sought rare old snuff-boxes." He has journalistic premonitions which stand him in good stead. "He is practically a whippoorwill in his ability to forecast death, especially the death of an eminent citizen." Generally considered Manhattan's most colorful as well as ablest city editor. Stanley Walker fulfills the first requisite of a Manhattanite by having been born elsewhere (on a Texas ranch), its second by living outside Manhattan (at Great Neck, L.I., where he keeps his wife, two children). Short, wiry, cigar-smoking, a demon for work and night life, Editor Walker knows a good deal...