Word: benjamin
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James B. Hallett, chairman, Walter H. Page, II, and William B. Schmidt, are on the committee which made these nominations, and they will be in charge of distributing and collecting ballots tomorrow. a group of about 20 Juniors will assist in this work. Arthur A. Ballantine, Jr. '36 and Benjamin H. Hallowell '36, members of the Student Council, will count the ballots and announce the results on Tuesday morning...
Arthur A. Ballantine, Jr. '36 and Benjamin H. Hallowell '36 were appointed last night as the two Seniors in charge of counting the ballots for the 1937 Senior Class Album election to be held next Monday...
Production Manager: Stephen Greene '38; House Manager: Irving H. Chase '89; Director's Assistant: Walter E. Teschan '37; Press Representative: John J. Garlick '38; Production Representative: Norman E. Bunt '38; Stage Manager: Samuel L. M. Cole '39; Electrician: Benjamin Roth '38; Patroness Chairman: Henry M. Winter...
Third box, addressed to Judge Benjamin R. Jones, was intercepted by postal officials. Former Sheriff Luther Kniffen's box had a defective fuse. Harry Goul-stone, superintendent of a local colliery, doused his in a bucket of water. Sixth, apparently intended for Gorman, onetime umpire of the Anthracite Board of Conciliation, was intercepted at Hazelton before it reached another James Gorman. That evening fire, supposed to have been started by an incendiary bomb, gutted the first floor of St. Mary's Rectory of Wilkes-Barre...
Jones & Laughlin history dates from 1851 when Benjamin Franklin Jones, a onetime barge-line operator, bought an interest in an iron works on Pittsburgh's South Side. He was joined a few years later by James Laughlin, an Irish immigrant who had prospered in a slaughtering and provisions business. Succeeding generations of Joneses and Laughlins have been cast with remarkable regularity in the mold of the founding partners. The Joneses went for steel, the Laughlins for culture. Founder Jones was already a bigwig in .he steel industry when Andrew Carnegie was a local telegraph boy. When Carnegie succeeded...