Word: stewart
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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According to J. F. Stewart, a British forest engineer who has traveled extensively through North Russian forests, the conditions which exist there have been grossly exaggerated in the outside world. He found the lumbermen comparatively well equipped in food, camps, clothes, and medical service. Furthermore Mr. Stewart considered that any deficiencies could well be laid to the faculty organization of the Soviet officials, who are more prone to theory than to actualities...
...Stewart-Warner...
Finn and Hattie (Paramount). This is a loose improvisation based on some incidents in Donald Ogden Stewart's Mr. and Mrs. Haddock Abroad. It is not as funny as it ought to be partly because it follows the hackneyed formula of a naïve U. S. couple seeing Europe for the first time, partly because of the unnecessary subplot involving Lilyan Tashman as an adventuress who tries to steal $50.000 from Mr. Haddock, and precocious Mitzi Green, who frustrates the conspiracy. It is funny when the insane hilarity of Author Stewart is permitted to come to the surface...
...handicaps. They raised the two able Texans who played in the East last summer- Cecil Smith from seven goals to eight, Rube Williams from six to seven. Beside Williams, three other players were raised to seven: Robert Strawbridge Jr., Stephen ("Laddie") Sanford of the open-champion Hurricanes, and Stewart Iglehart of the young Old Aikens. In the great first flight of polo-the internationalists-they left Thomas Hitchcock Jr. at the highest possible rating of ten goals, raised to nine goals his teammates, long thin Winston Guest of Long Island and stocky, long-driving Eric Pedley of California. Only surprise...
...Barnabee, Harvard, defeated F. Stewart, 15-12, 15-12, 18-15; H. U. Blaxter, Harvard, defeated Alexander, 15-5, 15-6, 15-6; Heydt, Lincoins Inn, defeated G. K. Emmett, 15-7, 15-11, 12-15, 17-16; B. Walker, Harvard, defeated G. Coughlin, 11-15, 15-12, 15-10, 10-15, 15-10; G. Clark, Harvard, defeated P. Bastedo...