Word: alleys
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Sever 6 English 32 Andrew-Clark Emerson A Colt-Wyzanski Emerson D Fine Arts 9a Fogg Lect. Rm. Geology 5 Zool. Lect. Rm. German 2a Sever 35 German 26b Sever 35 Government 11b Sever 36 Greek A Sever 30 Greek 12 Sever 30 History 28b Emerson A History 30b Alley-Gayl Sever 18 Gell-Newman Sever 23 Norris-Wilson Sever 24 History 40 Harvard 5 History 54 Andover Lib. Mathematics 22b Sever 30 Music 3 New Lect. Hall Philosophy 6b Emerson J Philosophy 14b Emerson J Physics B New Lect. Hall Physics 12 Harvard 6 Scandinavian 2 Sever 29 Semitic...
...Sever 6 English 32 Andrew-Clark Emerson A Colt-Wynanski Emerson D Fine Arts 9a Fogg Lect. Rm. Geology 5 Zool. Lect. Rm. German 2a Sever 35 German 26b Sever 35 Government 11b Sever 36 Greek A Sever 30 Greek 12 Sever 30 History 23b Emerson A History 30b Alley-Gayl Sever 18 Gell-Newman Sever 23 Norris Wilson Sever 24 History 40 Harvard 5 History 54 Andover Lib. Mathematics 22b Sever 30 Music 3 New Lect. Hall Philosophy 6b Emerson J Philosophy 14b Emerson J Physics B New Lect. Hall Physics 12 Harvard 6 Scandinavian 2 Sever 29 Semitic...
...well-known "hokum" of the Indian and the White man in the "silent purple wastes of the Arizona desert" even including the special "Indian" music. It is followed by a pseudo-historical play, "Napoleon's Barber" by Arthur Caesar, of a familiar pattern. The third play, "Goat Alley" by Ernest Howard Culbertson, is saved from being sheer melodrama by its characterization. Floyd Dell's scintillating little comedy "Sweet and Twenty" and "Tickless Time" by Susan Glaspell and George Cram Cook, though the latter is more or less trick writing, are highly amusing and the first notable plays of the group...
More, by studying such columns you can buy a Wire-Walking Male Dog, a Live Alligator, a Carrousel, the Lord's Prayer on a Pinhead, a Two-Headed Child, a Devil's Bowling Alley. Opportunity plus...
...mine which may be regarded by some as radical, but which to my mind is merely a matter of professional journalistic ethics-of common journalistic honesty. "That principle is the right of the public to a square deal on all occasions -to a fair show for its 'white alley.' I consider a newspaper to be the retained attorney for the public, and I believe a newspaper which is faithless to that trust is as much of a traitor as an attorney who betrays the interests of the client who employs him." Against the common charges of vulgar sensationalism...