Word: detailing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Reports from the Mason-Spinden expedition in the Yucatan have recently been received at the Peabody Museum which tell in some detail of the territory which the expedition has covered so far and of the discoveries it has made. Dr. Herbert J. Spinden '06, Curator of the Peabody Museum left Cambridge in January with Mr. Gregory Mason to continue the explorations which archaeologists have begun in the jungles of Central America. Splendid stone cities, great temples, and imposing statues have been gradually revealed during the last half century. But as yet the language, customs, and origin of the people...
...following is the second series of articles and interviews given to the Crimson by recipients of the recent Milton Fund awards. These articles describe in some detail the work of investigation or research which their authors intend to carry on in their respective fields...
...marry the more suitable Carmela. Salud would have him back, goes to Carmela's house on the evening of the wedding festivities, sings the warm, fragrant gypsy melody that won him first, dies of grief when he repulses her. On such an old, old story, unfattened by dramatic detail, the young De Falla wrote his opera, years before he was capable of El Amor Brujo or El Retablo de Maesa Pedro,** before he had any real understanding of the theatre, when music of one kind or another was all the same to him?simple, lovely, languorous. Lucrezia Bori, herself...
...carried on entirely by the students is divided into three departments, each of which is supervised by an editor. The Note department contains extended comments on various questions and corners of the law suggested by the problems arising in recent cases. Interesting cases are discussed in this department in detail and at some length, and their history and entire course is considered. The Book Review department is occupied in editing review of current books which have a bearing on the law, and are usually written by professors of the Law School...
...pivot, Mrs. Craig, is the familiar type of woman who worships meticulously at the shrine of her Lares and Penotes. These household gods are her all, and it follows that she spends at least a third of her rather selfish life in preserving the domestic perfection of every absurd detail. The author, by taking a small, self-centered soul and depicting its fussy quirks with well-seasoned finesse, has converted her into an entertaining dramatic study...