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Those who will be made ensigns follow: Walter R. Amesbury, Jr. '36, of Auburndale; Thomas A. Bittenbender '36, of Brookline; John L. V. Bonney, Jr. '36, of Columbus, Ohio; Charles B. Carroll '36, of Boston; Richard Cobb '36, of Brookline; Edward J. Coffey '36, of Salem; Whitney M. Cook '36, of Concord; Frank S. Deland, Jr. '36, of Cambridge; John F. Ducey, Jr. '36. of Boston; Arthur F. Duffey, Jr. '36, of Arlington; Edward T. Farley '37, of Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania; Louis C. Farley, Jr. '36, of Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania; Ernest B. Fay '36, of Lake Charles, Louisiana...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 36 COMMISSIONS WILL BE GIVEN OUT AT NOON | 6/18/1936 | See Source »

Charles William Kessler, of Salem, chairman of the Kirkland House Committee and member of the football team...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Eight Juniors and Sophomores Appointed Members of Council | 5/29/1936 | See Source »

...privy program in his State, intimating that WPAdministrator Hopkins was more interested in that than in feeding hungry children (TIME, March 23). As Dr. A. J. Kemper. county public health officer, uprose to dedicate the 100,000th privy last week, four bumpkin students from nearby Salem College, Senator Holt's alma mater, whizzed by in an automobile, tossed corncobs at his feet. Unperturbed, the tall, grave physician proceeded to point out that up to 1932 some 1,000 West Virginia children died of flux (contagious diarrhea), 250 citizens of typhoid fever every year, that at the rate of decrease...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WEST VIRGINIA: 100,000th | 4/27/1936 | See Source »

...made good newspaper reading. The list of last week's major winners suggested that sweepstakes are currently attracting a more substantial but less colorful clientele. Miss Martha Wellington, secretary to the advertising manager of The New Yorker, Mrs. Fannie Lebowitz of Albany, N. Y., a 71-year-old Salem, Mass, bachelor named Amos Strout, a firm of two Lynn, Mass, telephone operators, and a Hollywood billing clerk each won $150,000 with tickets on Reynoldstown. Mrs. Lebowitz said she planned to "make everybody happy." The rest said nothing and Secretary Wellington even ducked photographers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: At Aintree | 4/6/1936 | See Source »

...ratifying a "family settlement," a Baltimore court finally ended the lengthy squabble over the $28,000,000 Camel cigaret estate of Zachary Smith Reynolds, who was shot to death during a party at his Winston-Salem, N. C. home in 1932 (TIME, July 18, 1932 et seq.). To his wife of seven months, famed Torchsinger Libby Holman, whose indictment for his murder was not-prossed, the court gave $750,000. To their posthumous child, Christopher Smith Reynolds, 3, went approximately $7,000,000. To Anne Cannon Reynolds, 5, the dead tobacco heir's other child by a previous marriage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Mar. 23, 1936 | 3/23/1936 | See Source »

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