Word: samuels
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Samuel L. Baily III; Ebenezer F. Bowditch, Jr.; Peter Buffington; Thomas C. Cochran, Jr.; Malcolm F. Davis; Edmond R. DuPont; David Falk; Cyrus Hamlin; David T. Harper, Jr.; Ronald P. Mischner (captain); Duane J. Murner; Avery D. Pratt, Jr.; George H. Shaprie; Alan D. Slotkin; Michael B. Smith; Alton L. Steiner; Gregory B. Stone; Griffith J. Winthrop; Stuart G. McCornack (manager...
...Feeney's group, Temple Morgan, a former Harvard student, and Hugh McIssac, called President Pusey's home, and not finding him in, went to the Signet Society. They were subsequently escorted from the Dunster Street building by Mason Hammond '25, Pope Professor of Latin Language and Literature, and Samuel Beer, professor of Government...
...appetite for tabulation" and the determination to write nothing that he could not back up. His inability to talk back fast and deep-rooted fear of sudden criticism made him a wary recluse who spent year upon year building impregnable fortresses. Author Irvine is a shade sharp with Novelist Samuel Butler, who, like Shaw after him, quarreled with the theory of natural selection because it attributed the survival and development of species more to luck than cunning and paid no tribute to the power of the will. Yet Darwin's own calculated struggle is like a confirmation of Butler...
...left-hand coat pocket a sheaf of memo paper, held together by a paperclip, showing the status of his papers' cash account. Although he is a registered Democrat, many of his eleven dailies-scattered across the U.S. from New York to Oregon-are pro-Republican. The publisher: Samuel I. (for Irving) Newhouse, 59, who in the past ten years has moved to the top ranks of U.S. publishing right behind Hearst and Scripps-Howard and, counting Sunday circulation, just ahead of Jack Knight. Last week, in a typically unorthodox manner, Publisher Newhouse took the biggest step in his fast...
...When Samuel Eliot Morison '08, Jonathan Trumbull Professor of American History, retires this June, an unusual and generally unrecognized competition will move into a new phase. Carl J. Friedrich, professor of Government, will move to the head of the faculty competition for titles in Widener. An unofficial survey of Widener's card catalog disclosed yesterday that Morison has a commanding lead. His 70 different books and pamphlets, of which there are 155 separate copies in Widener, far outstrip all competitors. Friedrich has 41 titles, while third place goes to Symeur E. Harris '20, professor of Government, about ten behind Friedrich...