Word: bensonized
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...Richardson (Maine), Reid (H), Lindsay (Maine), Merembeck (Penn), Louis Lee (Penn), Offenhauser (Penn), Luttman (H), Totten (Union), Hagen (Columbia), Besth (Union), Kittee (Penn), McClintock M. I. T.), G. B. Lee (H), McNanghton (Maine), Flaksman (H), Sawtelle (Union), Kirwin (M. I. T.), Wildes (H), Pond (Cornell), Roth (N. T. U.), Benson (Maine), Thoren (M. I. T.), Ratcliff (Penn), Rothman (Union). Time, 30m., 36 and 4-5s. First five scores. Penn State 50, Harvard 60. Maine 64, Union...
...Liberal Club, the University chess players will play in the following order: Captain Chevalier, Leo Palier 21, B. J. Reines '28, G. F. Gravells '28, President of the club, Gordon Berry, F. B. Robinson '31, E. J. Davis '29, A. W. Couiman 1G.Ed., H. B. Wells '29, and John Benson...
...Chevalier '29; Leo Palier 2L; B. J. Reines '28; Gravell; Gordon Berry, instructor; F. B. Robinson '31; E. J. Davis '29; A. W. Coulman 1G.Ed; H. B. Wells '29; and John Benson...
Walter Hampden is 48. Born in Brooklyn, he attended Brooklyn's famed Polytechnic Preparatory School; then Harvard University; then studied abroad. He first appeared on the stage as "a walking gentleman" in Sir Frank R. Benson's company in 1901 at Brighton, England. In recent years he has been chiefly associated with classic roles; presenting one of the most widely known Hamlets in the U. S., and the most popular present-day revival of Cyrano de Bergerac, generally considered his best role. He has his own Manhattan theatre in which he presents revivals and occasional new plays...
...STORY OF GEOLOGY-Allan L. Benson-Cosmopolitan ($4). The vast rhythms of the dying stars, the sleepy, dwindling music of the tides, the rigadoons that dinosaurs danced in a primeval sunset, the hungry chisels of rain and wind and river; these are the paraphernalia of geology, the most spectacular, if the most inexact of sciences. Most laymen have no notion of its reaches, beyond a superficial jargon, culled from newssheets, of meaninglessly enormous chunks of time and space. For such laymen as prefer facts to fantasies, Author Benson ably, if condescendingly, puts forward geological facts (e.g.-the air ten miles...