Word: rosener
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Litman '35 will be lead off man and Carlisle Abell '35 will follow him. H. S. Derrickson '35 and J. A. Curtis '34 will be the other two members of the quartet. The two-mile relay team will be made up of E. F. Bowditch '35, L. J. Rosen '36, J. U. White '34, and John Wiggin '33. The team has been weakened by the unexpected loss of H. F. Kollmeyer '33 who promised to be a star. Although examinations do not permit regular workouts. Coach Farrell expects the Crimson to make a good exhibition Saturday...
...Montanari '33, W. A. Munroe '33, A. Nichols, Jr. '34, J. L. Noyes '34, J. A. Olivet '33, Vincent Palmer '35, E. C. Pugh '33, R. R. Reed, Jr. '34, W. E. Richardson '35, M. P. Richmond '34, W. P. Rockwell '35, Sumner Rodman '36, L. Rosen, H. O. Sebring, Jr. 3L, Ellery Sedgwick, Jr. '32, H. B. Shepard, 2d '34, W. S. Sims, Jr. '33, A. T. Smith, Jr. 2L, Ben Sommers '34, W. Spencer '34, Emil Steck, W. H. Stevsky '36, I. M. Street '35, Christopher Sykes '33, Joseph Sykes, Horace Taylor 3G, George Walker...
...mother more generously. It did not greatly disturb Mrs. Harris or Mrs. Templeton. Old Mrs. Harris remembered her big house in Tennessee whence the family had moved West. She took a quiet interest in the doings of her grandchildren, Victoria, Ronald, Adelbert. She was glad when Mrs. Rosen came over from next door to have a chat. When Mrs. Harris felt that she was going to die. she accepted this fact also with the wise fortitude which her daughter and granddaughter would have to await their own senility to acquire...
...degree of Bachelor of Arts cum laude was conferred upon Laurence Thomas Prendergast '32, of Dorchester, and also upon Harry Ayers Brinser '31, of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The degree of Bachelor of Science cum laude was conferred upon Victor Abraham Rosen '31, of New York City and the same degree magna cum laude was received by Maurice Bernbaum '31, of Chicago, Illinois...
...idea of the neutron was put forward formally as an attractive speculation by Dr. R. M. Langer and Dr. N. Rosen of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in a communication to the physical review of the American Physical Society in June 1931. Professor W. Pauli of the Institute of Technology at Zuruch, Switzerland, also suggested the utility of the neutron when he spoke last spring before the American Physical Society. He suggested that the neutron might offer a reasonable explanation of some fine structure in the spectra of elements