Word: brant
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Something approaching the importance which undergraduates attach to their studies and to extra-curricular activities is depicted in Weller's book, however. Brant, the young, troubled assistant professor going nowhere, and unable to "find" himself in the role of an educator, is pictured with a right amount of pity and disdain. Plainly, the great value of Not To Eat, Not For Love is that is treated the Harvard undergraduate not as an adolescent facing an adolescent's problems, but as a man facing problems involved with particular environment and situation. Although the novel's excesses are many...
...masterpiece. The photography of Folsom's long, bare corridors creates an oppressive mood which is seldom relieved, and the contrast between the prison's cold mechanical routine and the sympathetic plight of its convicts is unusually effective. Wanger needed no stars to simulate these convicts, and except for Neville Brant as the chief conspirator, has none. Most of the cast has been supplied by Folsom's good-behavior inmates, whose rioting possesses a good deal of fervor and realism...
...disciple, Dr. Ernest Jones. Biographer Andre Maurois published his best book, Leila, about man-eating French Novelist George Sand. In The Traitor and the Spy, James Thomas Flexner took a careful historical look at Benedict Arnold and Major John Andre in a book rich in excitement and scholarship. Irving Brant finished the fourth volume of his massive James Madison, which may yet (one more volume to come) turn out to be one of the most distinguished U.S. biographies ever written...
Robert Lavzer '53 and Elizabeth Hubbard '55 are starred in the cast, which also includes Winifred Hare '56, Mary Arnold, lina Backman '56, Chris Beels '53, Donald Stewart '53, Richard Eder '55, Peter Judd '54, Paul Matisse '55, and Peter de Brant...
...first two volumes on the life of Madison, Author Irving Brant called her "Dolly"; in the third volume - James Madison: Father of the Constitution, 1787-1800 (Bobbs-Merrill) - he switches to "Dolley." Says Biographer Brant: "Dolley Madison's spelling of her name became apparent the instant family manuscripts were looked into. She, her husband, her son and her lawyers all spelled it 'Dolley.' It appears that way in the original text of legal documents, but is commonly changed to 'Dolly' in copies made by clerks. Her correspondence with the sculptor [John H.] Browere specifically rejects...