Word: allen
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Captain Russ Allen limped on the field with the much needed aid of a cane and took his place in the press stands definitely a side-line figure until after the Davidson game, although he may be able to take a limited part in practices later this week. Chief Boston reported in uniform, but he didn't look very much like the Tiger hunter he was last Saturday. The exact nature of his injury is not easy to determine from his actions, it seems to be mainly a matter of favoring the spot that hurts most. Whether...
...place at Center, although there has been no official decision made as yet. Both have equally excellent Princeton game performances under their belt, and even though Russell's was a year ago, he is a powerful competitor for the pivot post. Chuck Klein will start in place of Captain Allen at guard...
Committee for the dance is composed of Martin D. Schwartz '38, chairman, J. Francis Dammann '39, Robert A. Dowd '38, John Barnard, Jr. '39, and John C. Wood '39. The corps of ushers includes Herbert Smith '38, Henry D. Hoffstot '39, Benjamin B. Kirkland '39, Allen S. Manning '39, Treadwell Ruml '39, and E. A. Whitney...
...have in reading the poem. The poet as seer who experiences life in behalf of the population is a picture that is not clear in my mind, but it is an interesting picture; it happens to be one with which I have no sympathy at all." So does Poet Allen Tate of Tennessee, with a schoolmasterish delight in heckling his audience, conclude the preface to his Selected Poems. These poems, true to their foreword, dish up in lieu of loaves of poetry no dough-balls of life. Strict, acute, circuitous, Poet Tate's verses invite their readers...
Serving modestly on the general staff headed by her husband, Poet-Critic Allen Tate (see p. 81), Kentucky-born Caroline Gordon belongs to that well-educated guerrilla band of Southern regionalists who about a decade ago took up where the Confederate Army left off in its fight against the Yankee cultural and economic invasion. Chief sallies have consisted of nostalgic biographies, fiction and poetry celebrating the feudal charm of the Old South, collective manifestoes (I Take My Stand) advocating return to an agrarian economy, magazines (The Southern Review et al.) and poetry societies whose interests are about equally divided between...