Word: griffith
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President Roosevelt went out to Griffith Stadium to see the Washington Senators win their only game of the World Series from the New York Giants (see p. 40). Two other spectators at the game were moose-tall Sir Ronald Lindsay, British Ambassador to the U. S., and scowling, bald-browed Sir Frederick William Leith-Ross, economic adviser to His Majesty's Government, in the U. S. to talk about settling Britain's $4,500,000,000 War Debt (TIME, Oct. 9). Sir Frederick did not meet the President that afternoon, but on his third day in Washington...
...broke the wrists of Boston Outfielder Randy Moore and Chicago Infielder Stanley Hack. A harder hitting team and, man for man, more impressive on the strength of batting and fielding averages, the Senators this year developed a crack centre fielder, Fred Schulte, to replace Sam West whom Owner Clark Griffith surprisingly traded last spring. Their young first baseman, Joe Kuhel, is a hard hitter and usually a good base-runner though he nearly delayed the Senators' pennant-clinching last week by falling asleep on third base in the important game with St. Louis. Teams which function unexpectedly...
...just in time for a reconciliation with Stella, a few sharp words to his meddling relatives. Curiously, Another Language suffers from the same fault that was in the cinema version of The Silver Cord-overemphasis. As though he feared that his audiences would miss the point, Director Edward H. Griffith made all the minor Hallams monsters instead of people. At the two Hallam parties-in which most of the action of the play goes forward-the guests behave with such dismal lack of manners that it is hard to believe that anyone clever enough to marry Stella could fail...
...Boston, where five months ago Hearst's American was ordered to pay $50,000 to Bonner, $4,200 to Griffith, the Washington newspapers loyally obeyed their unwritten law to ignore libel suits involving each other. In one particular, however, Hearst's Washington Herald broke the rule. When five of Plaintiff Griffith's nine counts were dismissed (he collected $250 each on the other four), the Herald blithely headlined...
...GRIFFITH GIVEN $1,000 IN SUIT...