Word: lamentations
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...appears hardly necessary in analogizing the Union to mention the often condemned final clubs, although much of Mr. Lament's criticism of the latter is doubtless deserved. The connection is not apparent. No social club attempts to do any of the many publicly beneficial things which the Union does constantly. Nor can an organization so large as the Union ever replace the intimacy and closeness of the small club, for which members are naturally selected by virtue of congenially and likeness of interests. Competition such as was implied by Mr. Lament's, between the Union and the final clubs...
Young Mr. Lament, with strong undergraduate support...
...younger son, Corliss, is temporarily engaged in a job less thoroughly understood by the American public. He is a senior at Harvard. His job might possibly be described as the pursuit of truth. But there appeared, last week, to be a difference of opinion between Mr. Corliss Lament and certain Harvard authorities as to the limits within which the truth might be publicly pursued...
American bankers who were present in Mr. Morgan's library as a "gallery" were: Thomas Cochran, Thomas W. Lament, Russell C. Leffingwell, Dwight W. Morrow. All are members of J. P. Morgan...
...death of Henry Villard, Oswald Garrison Villard, his son, inherited the paper, In 1917 the younger Villard sold The Post to Thomas W. Lamont. Mr. Lament was understood to have spent much money on The Post, and it was common talk that he "dropped a million or two" in it. Early in 1922 he sold the paper to a syndicate of 34 men headed by Edwin T. Gay and including Harold I. Pratt, Mrs. Willard Straight, Clarence M. Woolley, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Marshall Field, Charles C. Burlingham, Cleveland H. Dodge, August Heckscher, Finley J. Shepard, George W. Wichersham, Paul...