Word: bairds
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...appointments to the Summer faculty (besides Giovanni Papini) are: Ralph W. Aigler, law, of Michigan; John S. Bassett, history, Smith; Harry G. Brown, economics, Missouri; Wilbur G. Foye, geology, Wesleyan; Charles Edward A. Winslow, public health, Yale; Lyman P. Wilson, law, Cornell; Erville B. Woods, sociology, Dartmouth; Craig Baird, rhetoric, Bates; Arthur C. L. Brown, English, Northwestern; Dr. Alexander E. Cance, Massachusetts ; Theodore Collier, history, Brown; Wilbur H. Cherry, law, Minnesota; Horace A. Eaton, English, Syracuse; Hugh Hartshorne, religious education, California; Harold C. Goddard, English, Swarthmore; Edwin Greenlaw, dean of the Graduate School, North Carolina...
Senator Albert Baird Cummins of Iowa assumed his seat as President protern, for the Senate?unlike the House ?is a continuing body, two-thirds of its membership retaining their seats from one session to the next. According to a rule adopted in 1890, the President pro tern is elected to "hold office during the pleasure of the Senate and until another is elected...
...secretariat, which consists of F. B. Baird '25, W. T. Demmler '26, and J. L. Swayze, Jr. '25, plans to have atleast one assembly each month. This year for the first time printed agenda will be sent out to all members of the assembly to notify them of the meeting and to state the subject which will then be discussed...
...lake in St. James' Park has been empty until recently, when Sir James Baird, First Commissioner of Works, had it refilled. He was asked by Sir Harry Brittain, M. P., if he would consider the question of stocking the lake with fish. Sir James replied: " I am happy to assure my honourable friend that small fish in large quantities have already taken up their quarters in St. James' Park lake at no expense to my Department." The Christian Science Monitor says: " It is understood that the task of stocking the lake with waterfowl is to be left...
...unfortunate that the first play of the collection, "Mirage" by George M. P. Baird, should be a typical example of the all too 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...