Word: easterlies
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...yesterday's report it is stated that the policy of not checking up on the attendance of Juniors and Seniors before and after the Easter recess "does not apply to Freshman and Sophomores." Further confirmation of second-year men's Freshman-like status is found in the words of a previous statement: "the return of attendance (records) is to be no longer required in courses which are elected primarily by Juniors and Seniors...
Plucked from the aromatic ceremony of a Russian Easter to grace the tobacco fields of Connecticut, Anna Sten intrudes pleasingly upon the American scene in her latest picture, "The Wedding Night." The Slavonic accent, a charming one, is both preserved and accounted for by the fact that she is cast as the daughter of a toiling family of Polish immigrant farmers. It is a family which knows not the lilies of the field...
...nation. The analogy with our present economic and cultural plight is thus complete. Through our sense of guilt, as individuals and as a nation, we would . . . devote a day to spiritual stock-taking." Furthermore, declared The Christian Century, "the day does not lend itself to commercialization as do Christmas, Easter and Thanksgiving...
Following three performances in the Clubhouse, the show will be performed Saturday evening, March 30, at the Repertory Theater in Boston. As usual, there will be a cabaret afterwards. The next week, the Easter vacations, will see the production in cities up and down the coast. Last year "Hades! The Ladies!" was performed in Washington and the cast was entertained at the White House
...archeologists who are interested in the cultures of pre-Columbian America are still agnostic about the origins of the Inca, Aztec and Maya Indian civilizations. And if one looks at a map of the world, one is struck by the vast distances between outposts of Polynesia and America, between Easter Island and Chile, between the Hawaiian Islands and Mexico. Could Polynesians or Chinese, in their small boats or canoes, have traversed such forbidding stretches of water to bring a god of Egyptian origin to Yucatan and Mexico...