Word: canters
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Class of 1932 Moses AbramovitzWalton: Compleat Angler John Barton Appelbaum Helboin: Dance of Death Garrett Birkhoff Translation by Coleridge of the 1st part of Schiller's Wallenstein Harold Leslie Biabee Vitno Caesarum Jacob Canter Petrarea Rime Frank Gilchrist Goldsmith: Vicar of Wakefield Henry Adams Morss James: Charles W. Eliot David Henry Popper James: Charles W. Eliot James Wallerstein Gaskell: Cranford Henry Babcock Veatch Bridges: Testament of Beauty James Wallerstein Gilbert: The Savey Operas William Barry Wood Masefield's Poems Paul Maurice Zoll Sterne: Tristram Shandy Class of 1933 Molvin Leon Anshon Rowley's Poems Morton Clark Bradley Soldlitz: History...
...names of the Seniors winning Summas are: Moses Abramovitz of Brooklyn, New York; John Barton Appelbaum of New York City; Garrett Birkhoff of Cambridge; Harold Leslie Bisbee of Milton; Jacob Canter of Newton; Frank Gilchrist of Bronxville, New York; Henry Adams Morss, Jr. of Boston; David Henry Popper of White Plains, New York; James Sloss of Elkins Park, Pennsylvania; Henry Babcock Veatch, Jr. of Evansville, Indiana; James Wallerstein of White Plains, New York; William Barry Wood, Jr. of Milton; and Paul Maurice Zoll of Roxbury...
...Lalicker, Norman, Okla.; H. H. Lane, Barre, Vermont; Bernard Lemann, New Orleans, La.; D. W. Meiklejohn, Madison, Wis.; Brooks Otis Richmond, Indiana; D. H. Popper, White Plains, N. Y.; H. A. Smith, North Adams, Mass.; C. W. Swonger, Durham, N. H.; F. B. Williams, Jr., Middletown N. Y.; Jacob Canter, Newton, Mass.; V. I. Cheadle, Oxford, Ohio; R. A. Clapp Oberlin, Ohio; J. S. Edwards, Chapel Hill, N. C.; J. W. Fesler, II, Minneapolis, Minn.; G. T. Foust, Sawanee, Tenn.; G. A. Lee, Crawfordsville, Ind.; R. E. Luce, Princeton, N. J.; H. N. Maxwell Zanesville, Ohio; R. H. Morgan, Haverford...
Class of 1932: Jacob Canter, B. M. Davis, Joseph Sawyer, R. E. Slitor, E. B. Smullyan, W. B. Wood...
...Saionji, rejected it. Immediately anti-Japanese sentiment abroad began to crystallize. The U. S. Press had been outspoken from the first. The British Press now joined in. In Athens a Greek crowd threw rocks at the Japanese Legation. The Belgian Labor Party filed an official plaint. The Archbishops of Canter bury and York denounced the bombing of Chapei. Members of the Japanese Cabinet, alarmed, began to give interviews to foreign correspondents, in which they in sisted that their "misunderstood," that country's Japan was purpose only ful was filling its international "duty" at Shanghai...