Word: benjamin
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Other promising candidates include: Benjamin Beale '34, who played third base three years on the Milton Academy team and starred on the Freshman football and hockey teams; B. C. Elkins '34, captain and shortstop of the St. Marks team: J. T. Summers '34 of Noble and Greenough, who also plays football and hockey; John Ware '34, who captained the Milton team in 1930; Nathaniel Ware '34, who played shortstop at Noble and Greenough; Edward Laughlin '34, captain of Williston Academy last season; E. P. Morse '34, first baseman for Proctor Academy; and L. C. Jackson '34, of Houston, Texas...
...rewrite man took pencil and copy-paper into a telephone booth. The subdued hubbub that had filled the room all night died away to silence. Everyone crowded toward the city desk: writers, artists, "legmen" (seldom seen in the office), compositors and pressmen clustered ten deep about the chair of Benjamin Franklin, night city editor. They stood in silence, waiting and wondering with heavy hearts-jobs or no jobs? World or no World...
...books, which are being given by Harrison Dibblee '96, and Benjamin Dibblee '99, were originally the business records of their father, Albert Dibblee, and number about 150 in all. They consist of ledgers, cash books, correspondence, and bill books, and represent a complete record of the transactions of the company...
Horace's parents are divorced. His father, Russell Burt, resides in Los Angeles. His mother lived in Omaha until three years ago when she moved to St.Paul where her brother, Benjamin Wright Scandrett, famed railroad lawyer, is vice president of Northern Pacific. Another brother, Henry Alexander Scandrett, is president of Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Co.For two years Mrs. Burt and her brothers have been quietly, diligently searching for Horace, onetime student in Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Their search availed them nothing. Finally they resorted to the hope that Horace, who had been a thoroughgoing Post reader, would...
Referring to the argument that restricted families might prevent the birth of great men (viz. Benjamin Franklin, 10th son of his father, eighth child of his mother), Mrs. Sanger popped out: "I call your attention to the fact that the great leader of Christianity, Jesus Christ, was said to be an only child." Her unlearned remark** immediately raised hubbub...