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Plaster miniatures of these and lesser works went on exhibition in the Pittsfield (Mass.) Berkshire Museum last week, to celebrate the centenary of French's birth. His daughter, Margaret French Cresson (who once wrote a biography of her father-TIME, June 16, 1947), had selected and arranged the show. Among its carved mementos she included some more personal ones: French's mallets and chisels, cuff links, and a golden lock of hair clipped when he was three. Also on show was a life cast of French's sinewy hand, which turned out to be precisely like that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Familiar Figures | 8/14/1950 | See Source »

Brown played its last football game yesterday so now Richard Cresson Harlow can return to his Harvard job. The retired football mentor who has been scouting this year for Rip Engle's eleven is listed in the new catalogue as "Associate in Oology." During his coaching days, he was the University's Curator of Oology...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Back to the Birds | 11/26/1948 | See Source »

...himself has little of the personal magnitude which made Richard Cresson Harlow the darling of the sports writers. But if this can be termed a weakness and that is a moot point--, it can also he called his strength; for Valpey's personality projection will never interfere with his judgment of the team under him the way Harlow...

Author: By William S. Fairfield, | Title: Egg in Your Beer | 3/2/1948 | See Source »

Wonder coach at the rustic and little known College of Western Maryland, Richard Cresson Harlow was appointed head coach at Harvard on January 7, 1935, to the dismay and discouragement of a Cambridge weary of football losses. In seven years of looping defenses, double shifts and sleight-of-hand offense, the prestidigitator from Westminster put the Crimson back in the Eastern football picture and in the process built himself a reputation as on of the leading tacticians in American football...

Author: By Robert Carswell, | Title: Harlow Concludes Stay with .543 Won and Lost Average | 1/9/1948 | See Source »

...years of critical health forced the resignation yesterday of Richard Cresson Harlow, head football coach at Harvard since 1935. Coming 13 years to the day from the time when he took over the Crimson reigns from Edward L. Casey, the 58-year-old mentor's resignation followed closely on the heels of a communication from his physician, Dr. Walter Kempner of the Duke University hospital, Durham, North Carolina...

Author: By William S. Fairfield, | Title: Poor Health Forces Crimson Mastermind to Quit After 13 Years as Head Coach | 1/9/1948 | See Source »

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