Word: bacons
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...following graduates of Arts and Sciences received A.M. degrees: J. S. M. Allely, Lindsey, Ont., Canada; O. R. Altman, E. St. Louis, Ill.; R. C. Bacon, Quincy, Mass.; D. M. Bates, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; G. G. Benedict, Providence, R. I.; B. K. Blossom, Marion, Ind.; J. W. Boldyreff, Battle Creek, Mich.; J. R. Brewster, Andover, Mass.; John Butler, Wakefield, Mass.; G. K. Chalmers, So. Hadley, Mass.; M. L. Chan, Tsingtao, China; Tsung-Yuang Chang, Anhin, China; Isiah Chase, West Roxbury, Mass.; D. L. Cherry, Watsonville, Cal.; F. H. Clark, Hyde Park, Mass.; R. E. Dees, Crystal Springs, Miss...
Whiteside managed to have a crew row at 5 o'clock last night which had Captain Bancroft at 5, Bacon at 6, Cassedy at stroke, and Yeomans at 2, all members of the four-mile crew which defeated Yale at New London last year. Three other veterans of that crew did not row. Hallowell at 4 and Holcombe at bow will not row until next week and Saltonstall, veteran seven, will not be available for crew until the varsity hockey season ends...
...clock crew: G. J. Cassedy '33, stroke; A. L. Nickerson '33, 7; W. B. Bacon '33, 6; Malcolm Bancroft '33, 5; J. W. Peirce '33, 4; F. J. Swayze '33, 3; Edward Yeomans, Jr. '33, 2; Richard Stackpole...
Last year in the undergraduate contest, Gilbert Kahn '32 won the $500 prize with an essay on "The Poetry of Thomas Hardy," while in the graduate contest David Fleisher 2G took first place with "Bacon's Essays and Castiglione's Courtier'." W. F. Bruce '31 also won a $300 graduate prize with his essay on "Stereoismerism of Oximes...
Sixty-one years ago in Cincinnati eleven Negroes who called themselves the "Colored Christian Singers" shambled onto the platform of the old Vine Street Congregational Church. All eleven had been slaves, eaten hominy and bacon breakfasts in rude, smoky cabins, worked all day in cottonfields, sung spirituals in the light of the moon around their cabin doors. But they sang no spirituals that night in Cincinnati. Spirituals were slave songs. Accordingly they sang orthodox hymns and temperance pieces which made less impression on the audience than the rusty, ill-fitting suits the men wore and the women's dresses...