Word: furlonger
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William von E. Doering '38; Paul K. Doyle '38; Howell E. Dupuy, Jr. '37; Lawrence F. Ebb '39; Milton Elkin '37; James Etmekjian '39; William D. Fraser '38; Roger P. French '37; Robert W. Furlong '37; Gerard G. C. Galassi '39; Emile P. Gauthier '38; Harold L. Golden '38; Elisha R. Greenhood, Jr. '39; Ralph M. Harper, Jr. '37; Charles D. Harrington...
...Seniors named are William Armitage Beardslee, Leverett House and New Brunswick, N. J., Cyrus Cole Decoster, Jr., St. Paul, Minn., MacDonald Deming, Lowell House and New York City, Robert William Furlong, Winthrop House and West Roxbury, Lemuel Burrows Hunter, Dunster House and Wellesley Hills, Hubert Henry Nexon, Kirkland House and Brookline, Theodore Cabot Osborne, Boston, Theodore Herzl Rome, Dunster House and Worcester, William Aaron Salant, Kirkland House and New York City, Robert Ellis Shalan, Dunster House and Brooklyn, N. Y., William Vick Smith, Winthrop House and Medford, Sheldon Charles Sommers, Eliot House and Indianapolis, Ind., Arthur Szathmary, Adams House...
...winner, watching his two entries finish a disappointing workout at Churchill Downs one day last week. Thousands of other people thought so too. In the Florida Derby last March, Joseph E. Widener's bay colt of doubtful paternity* had equaled the world record for a mile and a furlong. Of the six races Brevity had entered, he had won five. With a winter's training in Florida behind him, the handsome three-year-old was in perfect trim...
...field events by these two men, as well as by a corps of discus, shotput, and javelin men, will be further decreased by the Holy Cross runners. In Walter Janiak and Larry Scanlon the Purple has two of the speediest dashmen in New England for the 100-meter and furlong events. Nothing was seen in the Stadium last Saturday to give Harvard much grounds for optimism in these two events...
...National Steeplechase at Aintree, England, one is that the same horse never wins two years in a row. Fortunately, the horses who run the race are unacquainted with the legends upon which their admirers base predictions of its outcome. Winner of the Grand National of 1935 was Major Noel Furlong's Irish gelding Reynoldstown, ridden by his son Frank, who was delighted because first prize ($32,000) enabled him to marry. Last week Frank Furlong, married to Pamela Kingsmill and fatter than a year ago, was too heavy to ride his father's horse but Reynoldstown...