Word: winslows
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This year's head, Allen A. Winslow, could not be reached last night for comment...
...what had happened to their hero. When last seen, Flash was being nibbled by a claw-armed space monster shaped like a sea horse. But by week's end, Crusader Gould had won a clear decision over the clamorous fans: Du Mont announced that another adventure serial, Don Winslow, would appear in the time slot previously held by Flash Gordon...
Below: The cheerleaders meet after practice to discuss rally plans. Left to right are: Winslow R. Briggs '51, P. Michael Mabry '53, George J. Chase '52, Christopher May '51, Maurice H. Richardson '52, Bernard Levine '52, Roger L. Butler '51 David Cabot '53. Of these eight men and David L. Smith '51 (not pictured), seven work at each game and two are substitutes...
Three new men have been added to this year's cheerleading squad following a competition. They are: Winslow R. Briggs '50, Bernard Levino '52, and Paul M. Mabray '53. The six other cheerleaders are: Roger L. Butler '51, David Cabot '53, George W. Chase '53, Christopher May '51, Maurice H. Richardson '51, and David L. Smith...
Besides gleanings for the curious, there was some good art: early genre studies by Winslow Homer, William Glackens' moveing paintings of the Spanish-American War, and Thomas Eakins' The Agnew Clinic, 1889, a monumental study of an operation in an early hospital. There was even a small painting by the great French impressionist, Edgar Degas, of 19th Century Cotton Merchants. But the show's main appeal was to the ordinary American with a warm heart and a taste for a good story. It was a good bet that by the time the Corcoran closed its big cavalcade...