Word: chartes
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...tending the fuel tanks, engines, temperature. On the bridge, First Officer Robert Oliver Daniel Sullivan took turns at the controls with Second Officer George King. Directly behind sat Radio Officer William Turner Jarboe, maintaining constant touch with the directional radio beam the airliner follows. Standing nearby over a chart table was Chief Navigation Officer Frederick J. Noonan. Also there was the tight-mouthed, round-shouldered, meticulous man who is Pan American's No. 1 pilot. No. 1 Pilot. Son of a hardware man, Edwin Musick was born in St. Louis in 1894. His parents moved to California when...
John J. P. Campana '36, of Hoston; Ira Chart '37, of Boston; Fred L. Chase, Jr. '37, of Dedham; William A. Coates '37, of Quincy; Albert Cohen '38, of Roxbury; Saul G. Cohen '37, of Dorchester; Franklin W. Coleman, Jr. '38, of Cambridge; Thomas Connerton ocC, of Dorchester; David C. Crawford '36, of Cotult; Herbert W. Crispin '38, of Somerville; George T. Cushman '37, of Quincy; Albert Damon '38, of Brookline; Bernard D. Davis '36, of Franklin; Edwin G. Davis '38, of Cambridge; Richard T. Davis '38, of Medford; Hugh G. Deane, Jr. '38, of Springfield; Campbell DeMallin...
...bewildered Sculptor Vittor: "Napoleon's Josephine posed for Canova without a bathing suit. After all Miss Leaver didn't pose in the nude and there's nothing to offend her. . . . My brother Anthony and I had every measurement. We had photographs of her. We had a chart...
...review--the Stage, Book Notes, and Music. The emphasis may underline an American evaluation of the present day, or an estimate of Humanism at Harvard. In all choice of emphasis the policy of each issue will be the realization of the Advocate's editorial aim. The Advocate seeks to chart, by publication of undergraduate and any such other material as is appropriate, where the force of college opinion and interest lies in any field, and the further result of its pressure. There are no limits: the subject may be athletics, scholarship, or poetry...
...newspapermen are notoriously an improvident breed, one shining exception is 35-year-old Talcott Williams Powell, son of an Episcopal rector, godson and namesake of the first director of the Pulitzer (Columbia) School of Journalism. Talcott Powell, anxious to make his mark in the world, has kept a performance chart on himself ever since he was a cub reporter on the New York Sun. Graphing his status from year to year, he projected his curve upward to assistant on the city desk of the New York Herald Tribune, upward to the general managership of the Middletown (N. Y.) Times Herald...