Word: merwin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...emphasizing the purposes in founding the University paper, Mr. Henry C. Merwin '74 said that the CRIMSON was founded to protest against the prevailing reactionary sentiment created by the Civil War. In closing the spoke to the effect that there is little question that the League of Nations would be entered by this country if only the young men of the country voted...
...speech of particular interest will be that by Mr. Henry C. Merwin '74, who was one of the founders of the CRIMSON. Mr. Merwin was one of the two men who first published "The Magenta" in 1873, a sheet which is the predecessor of the present paper. President Lowell will be the final speaker of the evening...
...Henry C. Merwin '74, who was one of the ten men who published "The Magenta" in 1873, a sheet which shortly became the University paper, will speak next. His talk will include an account of those days of trouble in 1873 when the success of "The Magenta" was very much doubted...
...first President of the paper was Mr. Francis Child Faulkner '74. The other editors on the original board, all members of the class of 1874, were Messrs. Eugene Nelson Aston, Henry Alden Clark, Samuel Belcher Clarke, Thomas Corlies, George Erwin Haven, Edward Higginson, Charles Austin mackintosh, Henry Childs Merwin, and Calvin Proctor Sampson. Of these first editors, only four Messrs. Clark, Clarke, Merwin, and Sampson are alive today...
...Miss Elsa Milliken; T. D. Cairns, Miss Mary Dowling; Charles T. Davis, Miss Jesse Southwick; C. F. Farbach, Miss Alice M. Teague; Van Duzee Field, Miss Maxime Walker; Kurt Groener, Miss Winifred Babson; James P. Haffner, Miss Adelaide Mac Intosh; Edmond McCarthy, Miss Rose Manning; Lowell McElroy, Miss Florence Merwin; Harold Schiesswohl, Miss Helen Green; Wallace E. Stearns, Miss Ferrol Moore; John Williams, Miss Barbara Smith...