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...past the major league presidents have appointed the umpires for the big games, but they have refused to continue this practice. Mr. J. T. Blossom, graduate director of athletics at Yale, has proposed that Harvard, Yale, and Princeton have their own umpires and interchange them with one another during a part of the preliminary season. From these men two would be chosen for the crucial series who would be agreeable to all three colleges...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MAJOR MOORE PUTS HIS O. K. ON NEW SCHEME FOR UMPIRES | 2/15/1924 | See Source »

...Kostes Palamas, entitled "Life Immovable" and "A Hundred Voices." In collaboration with Demetra Vaka he published "Modern Greek Stories." He was also the author of a volume of poems called "Lights at Dawn." A further translation which he made from the works of Palamas, a play entitled "Royal Blossom, has just been published by the Yale University Press...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Greek Minister to U. S. Will Address Meeting in Memory of Dr. A. E. Phoutrides '11, Former Instructor at University | 10/6/1923 | See Source »

...productions of the Shuberl operetta Blossom Time are now running simultaneously in Manhattan- one at the 44th Street Theatre, the other at the Shubert. Why? Well, the Shuberts say that they want to present Blossom Time in London and they just can't decide upon the exact personnel. So ballots listing the cast of both companies are distributed at both performances among the audience who are invited to vote as to who they think should travel over the water. The Shuberts have apologized to the Chicago Evening Post. You see, they thought that the Post's dramatic critic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theatre Notes, Jun. 4, 1923 | 6/4/1923 | See Source »

...Blossom Time, which opened in Philadelphia on October 8, has had the longest run of any show ever produced in that city...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema Notes, Apr. 21, 1923 | 4/21/1923 | See Source »

...altogether unamiable creature. Young Eddie follows the general literary pattern of small boys. He tries to chloroform the cat, gets bad marks at school, is beloved. The daughter, Adelaide, is the high spot of the Pinney family. She is gifted with a budding intelligence which begins to blossom under the beneficent influence of her pleasant if uninteresting romance with a book agent whom she finally marries. Adelaide is the Carol Kennicott, the Lulu Bett, the Leda Perrin of Poor Pinney. She gropes vaguely for something outside the stuffy household of her youth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Yet Another Babbitt* | 4/7/1923 | See Source »

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