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...trip to Pinehurst, N. C., during the Easter recess. Games will be played there with the University of Arizona, champions of the southwest. While a definite date has not been made, the Dedham Country and Polo Club will probably be the scene of practice three afternoons a week, with frequent clashes with the team at Dedham. At a dinner next Wednesday at the Club, plans regarding the use of the Club by the University poloists will to announced...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: POLO DEFEATS PAVE WAY FOR SPRING VICTORIES | 3/26/1924 | See Source »

...British Museum, on the other hand, has yielded the secrets of the unusual life and tragic death of Don John, Spanish Viceroy of California about 1640. The main plot, which incidentally contains numerous other plots, is the result of the meeting between these two. The complications become so frequent that the title, "Who's Who," is said to be a confession of the inability of the authors themselves to unravel the plot...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PUDDING SHOW IS FULL OF MYSTERY | 3/19/1924 | See Source »

Professor Raymond MacDonald Alden G. '96 from the University of California heads the list of visiting instructors. Professor MacDonald is the author of numerous books on the study of English literature and is a frequent contributor to educational journals. In 1905 he won a prize in "Collier's" short story contest. Among other prominent visiting instructors are Walter Van Dyke Bingham, Professor of Psychology at Carnegle Institute of Technology; Charles Wendell David, G. '18, Associate Professor of History at Bryn Mawr College; Harlan Cameron Hines, Professor of Education at the University of California, and Arthur Stanley Pease, Professor of Classics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PLANS FOR BIGGER AND BETTER SUMMER SCHOOL | 3/15/1924 | See Source »

...expected that the author dwell on these events when addressing primarily the young and newly naturalized American. Although Professor Hart leaves one with the impression that our history is a resultant of popular forces mainly, the significance of personal leadership in our history is very strongly emphasized by frequent panegyrical sketches of our "beacon lights." In the brief span of 320 pages, the author gives some consideration to the development of all phases of American life except music and art. After contact with this latest contribution of Professor Hart even the most skeptical could not suppress some feeling of gratitude...

Author: By R. L. Carey g, | Title: A PICTORIAL REVIEW OF AMERICA | 3/14/1924 | See Source »

...comedy of human nature would seem to require fine character-drawing, and this we have--in the first act. The mystic poet of the soil, Beem Sprattling, seeker after Truth in the subtract, follower of the "Oninvisible and the Onbeheord-of," keen admirer of "this fine pretty world," and frequent tenant of the county jail, is introduced with delightful effect. There are also the native flapper, Goldy, and her dangling swain, Roosh. A pleasing picture of the two old people, Lark Fiddler and Granny Maggot is finely drawn. Gilly Maggot and his scrawny, belligerent, and faithful wife, Mag, furnish excellent...

Author: By D. B. S, | Title: A SPEECH UNDILUTED BY ACADEMIC INK | 3/7/1924 | See Source »

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