Word: merz
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...yard dash--First heat--won by J. C. Brown '34 (three yards); second, B. L. Hennessey 1L., third, R. B. Winslow '31 (two yards). Time--7 3-5 sec. Second heat--won by W. C. Scott '34 (three yards); second, N. P. Dodge '33, third, L. Merz '34 (4 yards). Time--7 3-5 sec. Third heat--won by G. N. Williams '34 (two yards); second, W. L. Rasler '34 (one yard); third, E. R. Rockett (one yard). Time--7 3-5 sec. Fourth heat--won by J. A. Curtiss '34 (three yards); second, G. F. Bennett '33 (one yard...
...Hearst scrapped it two years ago. He replaces Henry F. Pringle, leaving to finish his biography of Theodore Roosevelt. Be- fore vacating his office, Editor Pringle saw published in Outlook the first instalment of his most recent notable acquisition, a well-documented, impartial survey of Prohibition by Author Charles Merz (The Great American Bandwagon, And Then Came Ford), able understudy of the New York World's Editor Walter Lippmann...
...THEN CAME FORD-Charles Merz -Doubleday Doran ($3). Author Merz of The Great American Band Wagon does not pretend to write a biography of Henry Ford. He illustrates instead the period of American development that is best illuminated by the highlights of Ford's career. The result is a logical piece of writing, efficient in its grasp of factual detail, but devoid of any great inspiration. Perhaps the subject matter is too familiar; perhaps the perspective too short. Unheralded by newspaper publicity, the first of the highlights were the successive experiments in mechanics that culminated in the historic Lizzy...
Today's article, dealing with Charles Curtis of Kansas, was written by Charles Merz, author of "The Great American Bandwagon." It will be found on page three of this issue. The next article, on Alfred E. Smith of New York, will appear at an early date...
...Author Merz, 34, Yale graduate, editorial writer for the New York World, contributor to magazines, has a little black mustache, a serious look. His book is the choice of the Literary Guild for February...