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Before going to Swarthmore, Raymond Walters had been registrar and English instructor at Lehigh University, his Alma Mater (1907). An American Legionary, onetime associate editor of School and Society, he is a member of the board of managers of the famed Bethlehem (Pa.) Bach Choir, about which he wrote a book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Postal Inaugural | 10/17/1932 | See Source »

...from Paris to Pekin, got lost in the Urals, starved in Tibet and had to be towed the latter part of his journey. Lily grew up in Paris where her mother did millinery. She studied piano at the Paris Conservatoire but when, during the War, she attempted to play Bach and Debussy for soldiers she usually ended by singing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: San Francisco Memorial | 10/17/1932 | See Source »

White (3.00) Cox, Effron; Stroke, Perry; 7, Clement; 6, Shea; 5, Bach; 4, Drury; 3, Reid; 2, Lyman; Bow, von Elsen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN CREW WORK ON CHARLES WITH COACH | 9/30/1932 | See Source »

During the next three years he studied in New York on a Juilliard Scholarship, sang with the Lutheran Oratorio Society at Town Hall, with the Bach Choir in the annual festivals at Bethlehem. Pa., and with the Juilliard Orchestra and Opera Company. Now 33. Bob Crawford is musical director of the Newark Music Foundation, radio conductor of the Newark Symphony Orchestra, soloist and occasional conductor of summer concerts at Chautauqua, N. Y. Increasingly busy, he is a licensed airplane pilot; by swift swoops he filled close engagements this summer in Fredonia, N. Y., Mystic, Conn, and Bradford...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Flying Baritone | 9/12/1932 | See Source »

...turn with reasonable hopefulness to Russell's The A B C of Atoms, Sullivan's Three Men Discuss Relativity. In this brief (220-page), disarming autobiography, Journalist Sullivan, calling himself Julian Shaughnessy, explains about himself with the same simple sincerity he uses to explain Bach or Bohr. Realistic, humble, Sullivan calls popular works on science "one of the most unprofitable of all forms of reading," admits ''it seems that I am a man without any marked talents." He wrote his autobiography under the common desire to understand and justify his own existence. Son of an Irish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Scientific Autobiography | 9/5/1932 | See Source »

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