Word: lemuel
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...following are the Glee Club members who will sing in the concert: John L. Angel '36, William J. Baker '36, Robert R. Barker '36, Edward L. Barnes '38, John L. Bishop '37, Bruce O. Blivem '37, Lemuel Bowden '36, Leonard K. Bristol '38, Kenneth W. Brown '35, John H. Burns '37, Courtlandt Canby '36, Gabriel G. Cillie 2G, Manley B. Cohen '36, Louis H. Conger '37, Stewart M. Dall '38, Nixon de Tarnowsky '35, Richard H. Dennis '36, George Ehrenfried '35, John H. Eric '37, Martin S. Erlanger '38, Egbert W. Fischer '36, Walter D. Fisher '37, Hans W. Forster...
...Derrickson, Darby, Pa.; Edward H.H. Jasen, Stroudsburg, Pa.; John S. Lang, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Rupert M. Smith, Bethayres, Pa.; Irving G. Shaffer, Reading, Pa.; George F. Tittmann, West Chester, Pa.; George D. Zimmerman, Reading, Pa.; Joseph A. Hindle, Providence, R.I.; George Cantor, Bennington, Vt.; Charles E. Tuttle, Jr., Rutland, Vt.; Lemuel Bowden, Jr.; Norfolk, Va.; Donald W. Davis, Jr., Williamsburg, Va.; John H. Gilbert, Milwaukee, Wis.; Lorne Rickert, Kitchener, Ont., Canada; Phillipe Dur, Toronto, Ont., Canada; Frederic C. Bartter, Baguio, Philipine Islands
...Geier '36, of Cincinnati, O., Edward T. Gignoux '37, of Cape Elizabeth, Me., Hyman Goldenstein '36, of Somerville, Mass., Paul C. Henshaw '36, of Rye, N. Y., Harry H. Hershmann '37, of Dorchester, Mass., Abraham Hertzberg '35, of New York, N. Y., Sidney D. Hoffman '36, of Brookline, Mass., Lemuel B. Hunter '37, of Wellesley Hills, Mass., Herbert M. Irwin, Jr. '37, of Port Washington, L. I., N. Y., Richard W. Ittelson '37, of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., Walter B. Kantack '36, of St. Albans, L. I., N. Y., Wilfred Kaplan '36, of Boston, Mass., Gilbert M. Kotzen...
Finally in Manhattan, Lemuel does the Algerian thing by stopping a runaway horse in Central Park and saving a banker's lovely daughter. But all he gets out of that is the loss of an eye. He goes to jail again, is held prisoner in a bawdy house, goes West to dig gold, loses his leg in a bear trap, is attacked by Indians led by a Harvard-educated chief. Convincingly scalped, he makes a precarious living in a sideshow, acts as a clown in vaudeville, finally bows to a Communist-assassin's bullet, and becomes in death...
...Lemuel Pitkin, whose story begins in typical Alger surroundings, with a widowed mother, a mortgaged New England house and a villainous lawyer, quickly passes on to breezier events. Encouraged by his friend, "Shagpoke" Whipple, a smalltown banker, to seek his fortune in the big city, Lemuel sets out for Manhattan, falls victim to a confidence man. and is jailed by mistake. Here his dismantling begins: all his teeth are pulled out by order of the kindly warden. Lemuel is surprised to meet his friend Shagpoke in prison. To Lem's commiseration the bankster replies: "I am an American businessman...