Word: lynn
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
No.Name Class Pos. Age. Ht. Wt. Home 10 Ormond, Edward S. '60 B 20 5.9 170 Zanesville, Ohio 11 Scheiffler, Jack S. '61 B 19 5.11 185 Jackson, Mich. 12 Pannes, Nichols '60 B 19 5.10 175 Lynn, Mass. 14 McTigue, John L. '59 B 21 5.10 160 Wellesley, Mass. 15 Lapinski, Edward F. '59 B 21 6.1 205 Greenfield, Mass. 16 Cashen, Henry C. '61 B 19 5.10 165 Grosse Pointe, Mich. 18 Finney, Frank R. '59 B 21 5.11 175 Royal Oak, Mich. 20 Carlin, Robert B. '60 B 19 5.10 175 Swampscott, Mass. 24 Phipps, John...
...Seesaw with two fine players, Ruth Roman and Jeffrey Lynn in CLEVELAND...
...LYNN FONTANNE...
...free of charge as part of their profit sharing." Said G.E. Vice President Lemuel R. Boulware: "Carey is unable to distinguish between bargaining and giving in. Three years ago we gave in. Not now." What strengthened G.E.'s hand was the fact that in three key G.E. locals (Lynn and Pittsfield, Mass.; Schenectady, N.Y.), representing more than a third of the union's dues-paying membership, Carey could not get a strike vote. Though more than 40 other locals backed Carey, he was clearly not sure just where he stood. At the I.U.E. convention last month...
Courses now seminars, such as Miller's Studies in American Romantic Literature, should be brought down into undergraduate range, and reorganized to accommodate a lecture-sized enrollment. So should courses such as Lynn's Mark Twain and the Southwestern Tradition. And to do this the department simply needs more teachers, and needs to employ them in undergraduate American courses. Such action, besides reviving the weak pulse of Warren House, might keep many intelligent people from despairing and deserting into History and Lit, and make the department more of a going concern and less of a last resort...