Word: merion
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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David H. Alpers, Merion, Pa.; Robert I. Blake, Braintree, Mass.; Norman Bruck, Newark, N. D.; Edward P. Carter, Manchester, N. H.; Marian A. Cheek, Weston, Mass.; Monroe D. Dowling, Jr., New York City; Joseph D. French, Newton, Mass.; Thomas S. Gates 3d, Devon, Pa.; James A. C. Gerry, Spartanburg, S. C.; Norman E. Hartness. Tulsa, Okla.; Fletcher Hodges 3d., Pittsburgh, Pa.; Robert E. Morrison, Newton, Mass.; John C. Perkins, Hampton, N. H.; Donald G. Richards, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Paul S. Rosenthal, Dorchester, Mass.; George W. Smith Jr., Tiptonville, Tenn.; Kilby P. Smith, Scituate, Mass...
Those elected are: Paul J. Alpers of Merion. Pennsylvania and Lowell House, majoring in English; Robert J. Blattner of Milwaukee, Wisconsin and Lowell House, majoring in Mathematics; Melvin Croan of Dorchester, Massachusetts, majoring in Government; Ronald M. Dworkin of Providence, Rhode Island and Eliot House, majoring in Philosophy...
...legs that ached while he was on the fairway and hurt even worse at night. They had never ached so badly as one day in Philadelphia in June 1950. He stumbled into his hotel room and sank into a chair. That day he had gone 36 holes at Merion to tie for first place in the U.S. Open, and now his legs were swelling and tightening with cramps. Hogan tried to sleep that night but it was no use. Since he is allergic to painkilling drugs, his only recourse was to draw a hot tub of water...
Despite a case of mumps which has sidelined him for the last few matches, Number One man Charley Ufford recovered enough to fight his way into the final round of the DeForrest-Tyler invitation squash tournament only to lose to Charley Brinton of the Merion Cricket Club 11-15, 15-12, 15-3, 15-10, at the Plainfield Country Club, Sunday...
...year, he lent 25 paintings to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Conservative Philadelphians scorned his moderns as "quack practitioners" and "cheats."Quick-tempered Alfred Barnes took his paintings back from the academy, locked up his collection in a $500,000 limestone museum on his Main Line estate at Merion, Pa. At the same time, he set up the Barnes Foundation to offer free art training to a limited number of carefully selected students a year. Since then, few besides foundation students and personal friends (including John Dewey, Katharine Cornell, Charles Laughton, Albert Einstein, Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts) have...