Word: walcott
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...combination crew seatings--Stroke, Martin; 7, Stackpole; 6, Armstrong; 5, Walcott; 4, Dow; 3, Mendenhall; 2, Jordan; bow, Lewis; cox, Jones...
...Adopted a resolution by Connecticut's Walcott authorizing the award of a Distinguished Flying Cross to Amelia Earhart Putnam...
...Haines, the combination crew, made up of four upperclassmen and four Freshman substitutes, will leave for Red Top after the examination period. The seatings of the crew, as it went out today were, Stroke--R. H. Martin '34; 7, Richard Stackpole '34; 6, Taggart Whipple '34; 5, S. H. Walcott '33; 4, K. W. Brown '35; 3, J. T. Mendenhall '35; L. P. Jordan '35; bow, D. W. Lewis '35; cox, F. F. Jones...
Hunters. To expedite the investigation, Chairman Peter Norbeck, a onetime South Dakota well-digger, last week organized a sub-committee of five. Besides himself, Senator Norbeck appointed Republicans Couzens and Townsend, Democrats Fletcher and Glass. Conspicuously omitted was President Hoover's good friend Senator Walcott of Connecticut, who started the bear hunt. Washington thought he had tried to soft-pedal the inquiry after trapping more Republicans than Democrats in bear's clothing. Four special investigators and an accounting firm were to be hired. Representative La Guardia's explosive testimony was the subcommittee's first move to broaden the hunt...
Somewhat irked by Mr. Whitney's composed manner and cool utterances, the committee set off on a new angle of inquiry. Senator Walcott of Connecticut, President Hoover's good friend who started the inquiry, had less to say last week, left the conduct of the investigation to Chairman Peter Norbeck (who was in the West when it was voted) and to the committee's new counsel, William A. Gray of Philadelphia. First move of the committee was to publish the names of 350 traders who were short 2,500 or more shares as of April...