Word: subbed
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...final week in the White House. The last State dinner was for Speaker John Nance Garner, uncomfortable in evening clothes. There was a tea party for the White House secretariat. Army & Navy officers rubbed shoulders with employes from the Treasury and Labor Departments at the final State reception. The sub-Cabinet gave the President a good-by dinner at the Mayflower Hotel; he was presented with a desk chair. The Cabinet lingered long over an informal Sunday supper at the White House. A steady stream of G. O. Partisans passed through the executive offices to wring Herbert Hoover...
...Bliss '36, business manager of the Freshman Red Book, announced yesterday the election of five Freshman to the Red Book Business Board. The newly-elected sub-chairman is Edward Putnam Currier, Jr. '36, of Scarboroughon-Hudson, New York. The other members are: Richard Abeles Illoway '36, of Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, Walter Avery Kernan '36, of Utica, New York, Frederick Clarke Lawton '36, of Plainfield, New Jersey, and Edwin Howard Baker Pratt '36, of Glen Cove, Long Island...
...make-up were made. Although only 11 men have as yet been picked, Drufy announced that three additional members will be designated this week, bringing the final number to 14. Before the annual is published late in April, the member showing the most originality and efficiency will be chosen Sub-Chairman to assist Drury in his duties...
Meanwhile, during the past month, the Committee of Nineteen's sub-Committee of Nine had been playing a diddling game of questions & answers with Japanese Delegate Yosuke Matsuoka, each side trying to outdo the other in feats of diplomatic finesse. This parlor pastime abruptly ceased as the sub-Committee buckled down to drafting the suggestions of M. Massigli and Captain Eden into form for action by the Assembly...
...Senate Sub-Committee on Banking and Currency is now holding hearings on a bill to permit R. F. C. loans for school maintenance: Why banks and railroads should be the only ones to receive such aid is difficult to see. After all, education was considered a governmental responsibility long before business. --Yale News