Word: bartlette
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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This was no surprise to track experts. Southern California's coach. Dean Bartlett Cromwell, an old track & fielder himself, has trained more world-record holders and Olympic winners than anyone else in the U. S. In 1912 he was famed for Hurdler Fred Kelly. After the War it was Charlie Paddock, fastest sprinter of his time; and more recently it was Frank Wykoff. Since 1928 he has been renowned for his record-breaking pole vaulters, most sensational of whom were the "Trojan Twins," Bill Sefton and Earle Meadows, who wound up their college careers last year by breaking...
...Arts and Sciences; Travelling, Albert and Anna Howard Fellowship to John L. Angel '36, of New York. Resident, Austin Fellowship to Vernon J. Parenton, of University, Louisiana; Edward Austin Fellowship to Charles C. Yeager, Jr., of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Bliss Fund and University Scholarship to John M. Chandler, of Bartlett, New Hampshire; Bliss Fund to Arthur E. MacGregor, of Needham; Bliss Fund and University Scholarship to Cammann H. Niederhof, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Bliss fund and University Scholarship to Jonathan W. Wright, of Spokane, Washington; Graduate Fellowships in Government to Edgar J. Kemler, of Baltimore, Maryland, Frederick H. Bullen, of Ithaca...
...contemplating concentrating in Chemistry. Those Freshmen who have already had sufficient chemistry should take courses B and 3, a first and a second half-year course respectively. B is unsatisfactory on the whole--it is rather easy, the lectures are not connected with the reading, and Bartlett tends to be dull in his elementary lectures. But this year a special section will be arranged for particularly qualified men. Chemistry 3 is a second semester course on Qualitative Analysis. Professor Forbes is hard for Freshmen to follow unless they have done the reading, which is also hard to follow...
This award was made for progress in research which involves the application of the methods of physical chemistry to the problems of organic chemistry. Bartlett explained, "This approach proved valuable in checking certain much-debated theories concerning molecular rearrangements and additional reactions of halogens to carbon compounds...
...Bartlett pointed out that although chemical equations show components and results, they do not actually reveal the nature of the process involved. His accomplishments will indirectly help other chemists to solve problems in organic chemistry...