Word: marlowe
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Marlow. Columbia's 150-lb. crew, in England for the famed Henley race, last week won a practice race from the Twickenham Rowing Club over the Henley distance (|⅞ mi.), at Marlow on the Thames...
...Rawlings and E. M. Daland will be instructors while the following men will hold research fellowships: H. A. Abramson, R. T. Beebe, D. R. Drury, Jacob Lerman '23, G. E. Lewis, A. A. Marlow, O. O. Meyer, and W. T. Salter...
...extraordinarily interesting issue, the November Advocate conceals under pseudonyms the authorship of its two most controversial offerings. About the identity of "Richard Caxton", who writes "The Bloody Shirt, World-War Model", and "William Breaksbread" and "Kid Marlow", authors of "The Rally", an uninitiate reviewer had better hazard no guesses. He can assert, however, that these gentlemen handsomely assist the Advocate's announced intention of making itself both more timely and more readable. Both subjects, the American Legion and a department (or is one point of "The Rally" that, after all it isn't a department?) of the University...
...periodic discovery, by some active-minded undergraduate, that some department of some portion of the faculty is throwing its weight about a little too promiscuously--and the prompt announcement of the discovery in print. I am profoundly ignorant of the situation exposed by Mr. Breaksbread and Mr. Marlow, and quite unable to pass judgment on their exposition. Certainly, their poem is amusing and their gay malice irresistible. An editorial suggests some hesitation, on the part of the board. None, it seems to me, is called for. The production justifies itself; it voices a typical Harvard impatience, whether well...
Died. General Sir George W. A. Higginson, 100, famed "Father of the Grenadier Guards" (see p. 14) ; at Marlow-on-Thames, England...