Word: sherlocking
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...pound class--Henry P. Sherlock '38 defeated Edward P. Richardson...
...boards with vigor and histrionic skill which have for so long made him a favorite and which are now filling the Shubert Theatre to the doors. It's rather hard, after all these years, to think of Mr. Gillette without the pipe and double peaked cap which accompanied his Sherlock Holmesing, but it appears that Mr. Gillette has versatility and can ably portray characters other than the Doyle hero...
Other on the team are: Arthur A. Valois, Jr. '36, 115-pound; Walter L. Crampton '36, 125-pound; Henry P. Sherlock, Jr. '38, 135-pound; John E. Brassil, Jr. '37, 145-pound; and Spencer Howe '37, heavyweight...
...almost agree with the Paramount's advance statement, which claims that Earl Derr Bigger's oriental sleuth as portrayed in the movies is rapidly taking his place by the lean side of Sherlock Holmes. Charlie Chan, spouting the cherished wisdom of the East, is rapidly becoming one of the screen's few lasting fabrications...
...Crimson, as the guardian of student liberties, regards Mr. Apted with suspicion, as it would regard anyone in his position. For years he has been ridiculed as a pseudo Sherlock Holmes, an ineffective detective, a kill-joy at student riots. The average student has never met Mr. Apted, and forms his opinions of him from such accounts as the editorial in yesterday's issue of the Crimson. It is only the occasional student who has cause to deal with Mr. Apted. He is surprised to find the sergeant sympathetic, understanding, and anxious to do everything in his power to make...