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This event was in some ways superior to its white counterpart. The couples were less charming, it is true, and in the gloomy hall it was hard to distinguish their faces. Yet they danced with tremendous enjoyment, at the end of the eleventh day. At the end of the twelfth, one team married, in a ceremony that was held on the dance floor. The colored preacher, the Rev. S. W. Wigfall, solemn and embarrassed, a good man if somewhat stupid, was grossly insulted by laughter throughout his reading of the service. Bernard Paul, aquiline, and Amelia Hallbach, spade-faced, were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dance | 7/9/1928 | See Source »

...each other? Granted the value of athleties and of other undergraduate occupations, why pretand that these are negatived by more studying? Even Harvard graduates have been loudest in deploring the fact that the education acquired by the average American college graduate is vastly inferior to that which his European counterpart receives. The finest athletes could still survive if they managed to spend a little more time with their books. Nor would they necessarily be any less useful as leaders and citizens in after life. The New York Times

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Academic Conflict | 5/11/1928 | See Source »

...incredible to any Greek, at the time when the unknown sculptor made his statue. To the wise Greeks, who lacked the prurient estheticism of modern magazine cover art, the male face or figure was, in its more austere and tempered contours, perhaps a trifle more beautiful than its female counterpart. Either one, when dexterously transmuted into marble, could be regarded with an impersonal regard for its objective beauty. They, the sculptor himself, would not have regarded the performance of Greenville's citizens as obscene or grotesque; they, like the citizens, would have failed to understand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Apollo at Greenville | 4/2/1928 | See Source »

Tomorrow evening the CRIMSON will open its first Freshman competitions. Perhaps it would be well to pause here a moment. Since the earliest CRIMSON days there has always been a certain glamor about the first Freshmen competition which finds no exact counterpart in any of the later contest. It is still an honor to be the first man in the class to make the CRIMSON and although the distinction may make no practical difference on the Board itself, there is a traditional respect paid to the editor who led his Freshman competition. Whether he attains any higher office...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON CALLS 1931 TOMORROW | 2/7/1928 | See Source »

...Author in appearance, is the shaggy counterpart of a country doctor. This is not unseemly; his grandfather was a doctor, his father, Professor Johann Schnitzler, a once famed throat specialist. Author Arthur Schniztler studied medicine, became an M. D., lectured on ailments of the throat, at the Poliklinik in Vienna. One of his early published works was a paper on Nervous Diseases of the Voice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Daybreak | 12/26/1927 | See Source »

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