Word: andersons
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Coach Joe Stubbs, mentally planning changes for the next game, a week from last night, laconically summed up the Harvard point of view on the outcome. Said he: "Generally satisfactory." The summary: HARVARD M.I.T. Hovenanian, Hallowell, G. Roberts, Carr, l.w. r.w., Muther, Anderson Moseley, Ford, Dewey, Cutter, c. c., Eddy, Shipper S. Callaway, Ecker, Mechem, Quinby, r.w. l.w., Acker, Stiles Claflin, Duffey, Allen, l.d. r.d., Goodwin, Cook J. Roberts, Brown, Hicks, r.d. l.d., Porter, Minot Waldinger, Kidder, g. g., Kenny Score--Harvard 12, M.I.T...
Thanks to enlightened Presidents Hill, Eliot, and Lowell, however, the music Department has survived, and with it those organizations which lend so much to the pleasure and prestige of Harvard life. Professor Spalding neglects no aspect of music here, happily complimenting the Harvard band and its great Leroy Anderson for their part. The work was not at all easy to perform -- assembling the data and information on his subject -- and Professor Spalding offers a highly interesting treatment of it. There are a good many fine illustrations...
...every case the stuttering was notably diminished, in some cases eliminated entirely-so long as the crawling posture was maintained. Reporting this last week in Science, Experimenter Hazle Geniesse ventured a guess that such a posture might alter the cerebral blood pressure, remove the spasmodic stimulus. ¶ Dr. Donald Anderson Laird, Colgate's well-publicized authority on sleep, also had a report to make last week on the effect of posture on blood distribution. Dr. Laird thought that, although mankind was benefited by acquiring the upright position, there were some disadvantages. In erect man the blood tends to collect...
Selected from a list of 41 recommendations by proctors in the Yard, the membership of the new committee includes the following: Robert W. Anderson, John O. Bates, Oliver P. Bolton, Peter F. Cunningham. Robert T. Gannett, 2nd, J. Gorden Gilkey, Jr., Finlay H. Perry, Harvey M. Rose, and Edward H. Schoyer
...week at the Metropolitan, is a picture that is distinctly heartening to one who has begun to envision a complete relapse, if not collapse, of Hollywood production. Stark Young's book of the same name, contained the germ of a truly dramatic idea, and the sensitive adaptation by Sherwood Anderson and Laurence Stallings made the most of it. The scene is laid in Missouri during the Civil War, where we find Randolph Scott in the role of the forerunner to the modern conscientious objector. He "likes to see things grow," and hates destruction. His mature and civilized ideology run counter...