Word: marchande
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Sidney S. Coggin '34 won the Vane Trophy that goes to the Intercollegiate chess champion each year. Eric W. Marchand '36 placed third in the tournament...
...CASE OF COLONEL MARCHAND- E. C. R. Lorac-Macanlay ($2). The Colonel, a "womanizer." is dead after tea with a redhead. Pearls, a bastard and a decomposed cat hang the miscreant...
...undergraduate scholarships were received by S. S. Alexander '36, S. J. Boguniecki '36, R. J. Currie '36, Jesse Effron '36, Irving Feister '36, E. W. Fischer '36, R. C. Hall '36, N. A. Levine '36, J. J. Maloney '36, E. W. Marchand '36, G. W. Oettle '36, J. J. Ponuchalek '36, Gilbert Radlo '34, O. E. Rodgers '36, T. H. Rome '36, R. A. Sutermeister '34, H. P. Welch...
...match which two of its members are holding by mail with the Powell High School in Powell, Wyoming. A short time ago, Glenn Biesemeier of Powell wrote the members of the team challenging them to a match. As Harvard accepted, J. B. Hickam '36, and E. W. Marchand '36, two members of the team, are now playing four games with them...
...rides victoriously into the finish of a bicycle race. He progressively masters burgher manners and the industrial system, becomes owner of a phonograph shop, then a department store, then a vast phonograph factory, in which mass production and prison methods are satirically interlined. The second convict, Emile (Henri Marchand), free at last, a wistful champion of the bill of rights, is jailed again for singing to flowers. Again he escapes, chases a pretty girl (Rolla France) into the phonograph factory, is herded into line, disrupts the phonograph-assembling routine with his fumbling individualism, finally confronts the phonograph tycoon...