Word: walcott
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Mills had written the gold standard plank in the last Republican platform and now he was determined to see that the remnants of his party stood firmly on it. Into conference he went with Representatives Snell of New York and Luce of Massachusetts, Senators Reed of Pennsylvania and Walcott of Connecticut. Here & now, he told them, they must stand and fight for the traditional "hard money" principles of the Republican party. When they issued a manifesto, Mr. Mills declared he approved "every word of it." Excerpts...
Third: 4.00 o'clock; stroke, F. A. Reece '35; 7, Richard Stackpole '34; 6, G. T. Keyes '35; 5, C. D. Scott '33; 4, Henry Saltonstall '35; 3, P. V. Bray '35; 2, R. D. Martin '33; bow, J. R. Walcott '34; coxswain, T. H. Hunter...
Other poems and stories listed in the table of contents are: "The Nursery", by J. C. Walcott '34; "Petit Jour", by R. S. Fitzgerald '34; "Forty Days and Forty Nights", by James Laughlin, IV '27; "Masks", by J. J. Slocum '36; "God's in His Heaven", part four of a novelette by M. L. Anshen '33; and "Goodbye", by W. P. Blanc...
John Cotton Walcott '34, of Cambridge, has been elected to the Literary Board of the Harvard Advocate, and Franklin Plummer Whitbeck '35, of Bronxville, New York, to the Business Board, it was announced last night...
...newcomers in the next House the white hope is slim, bald Representative-elect James Walcott Wadsworth Jr. of New York.* Twelve years (1915-27) in the Senate, his seat in which he lost because he would not weasel on Prohibition, proved his worth as a statesman. "I'm not out of politics by a long sight," declared Mr. Wadsworth when he quit the Senate. Tried & true blood rather than young new blood (he is 55), Mr. Wadsworth is counted upon by G. O. Partisans not only to make a conspicuous House record for himself, despite the hobbling effects...