Word: donlan
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Dates: during 1951-1951
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Spending his honeymoon with Yolanda Donlan (Mrs. Drake) on a farm in England, Fairbanks plays the dude. He continually argues with a cynical caretaker, whose Aroostook twang is painfully out of place, and with a handyman who can never finish a job. This too typical domestic scene is complemented by giggles from Yo-Yo (Yolanda, an actress who should have been left on the string) and snide marriage-night remarks from Drake...
Earlier this week a bitter battle between Alfred Sprague Coolidge '15, lecturer on Chemistry, and state representative Edmond J. Donlan broke out on the subversives bill. It started after Coolidge charged that the committee "bulled and heckled witnesses like prisoners in a concentration camp." Donlan demanded Coolidge apologize to the committee. When the refused, the two began yelling at each other...
...proponents had their last word at about three o'clock and the opposition began with Representative Putnam. He complained that there were no copies of the bill, saying "I don't know whether I'm for or against this bill; I haven't seen it." Representative Donlan shouted that the Committee had been unfairly accused. "I think you owe this Committee an apology...
...Well, you won't get it," Putnam replied. Donlan went on, "You're just trying to pull a red herring across this Committee's path. Why are you up here if you don't know whether you're for this bill or not? Or are you doing this just as a front? I DON'T LIKE THESE SLURRING REMARKS...
Unlike his predecessor, Eugene Griffin, the Tribune's reticent Ottawa correspondent, who three years in a row came to Harvard to look for "red tinges on the Ivy," Fulton talked amiably about his task. He said that State Representative E. J. Donlan, of West Roxbury, had given him a list of the leftist affiliations of Kirtley Mather, professor of Geology, that "was an arm long...