Word: patterson
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Cohen '32, A. J. DeVoto '33, D. B. Edmonston '32, A. L. Gordon '34, M. A. Hoffman '34, I. C. Lebenson '34, A. P. Levack '32, M. J. Litwack '34, M. F. Lowenstein '32, Cecil Lubell '33, H. E. Magnuson '34, T. I. Moran '32, H. D. Patterson '34, S. M. Peyser '34, A. E. Phillips '34, Leo Srole '33, D. M. Sullivan '33, and J. C. Willis...
Since it became known that 282 abductions were recorded in police records in the last three years, bills by Senator Roscoe Conkling Patterson and Representative John Joseph Cochran of Missouri to make kidnapping across a State line a Federal offense punishable by death have been pushed in Congress. Last week House and Senate Judiciary Committees promised these measures speedy attention, and the House Post Office and Post Roads Committee reported favorably on a bill making the sender of an extortion letter liable to $5,000 fine, or 20 years in prison, or both...
...sell Wartime "Jenny" planes, disposed of 50 at $5,000 each. Also he ran a flying school, went barnstorming, had his share of crack-ups from occasional foolhardiness. After directing the aviation program at the Philadelphia Sesquicentennial Exposition (1926) he was appointed Chief of Air Regulation under William Patterson MacCracken Jr., the first Assistant Secretary of the Commerce Department's newly formed Aeronautics Branch. In that capacity he issued to Mr. MacCracken Pilot's License No. 1 after Orville Weight had modestly declined it because he no longer flew. Col. Young received in turn No. 2. When Assistant Secretary MacCracken...
Four members of the Freshman Debating Council have been selected to debate against Radcliffe either the week before or the week after the spring vacation: F. DeW. Bolman '35, V. H. Kramer '35, J. D. Patterson '35, Morris Pfaelzer '35, and C. L. Baumann '35, alternate...
...some 300 newspapers had published (or agreed to publish) them free of charge- first among them the Chicago Daily News whose publisher, Col. William Franklin Knox, is chairman of the C. R. 0. First to refuse publicly was the Manhattan tabloid Daily News whose publisher, Joseph Medill Patterson, is of the great family that publishes the potent Chicago Tribune. His editorial retort to his Chicago rival: "Col. Knox and his committee have now undertaken to pull what is best described as a fast one on the newspapers of the nation. . . . We understand that some papers are consenting to give their...