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Nine o'clock: For early shoppers, English 160, Modern Drams, (Ibsen to Tennessee Williams), is worth a look. The 44 plays covered make consistently interesting reading; Baker's lectures are informative if not very unusual. The course has never been known for abnormal difficulty (Emerson D). Another early morning enterprise--of incourse--is term only to auditors since it is a full course--is Mcrk's History of the Westward Movement, (History 162). The lectures are excellent (Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CLASSGOER | 2/9/1950 | See Source »

...clock: Gov. 155, Government Regulation of Industry, meets in Emerson D. Cherington is an excellent showman, and the course is popular, but he does not go very deep. Ec. 161 covers more or less the same ground much more completely, although with considerably less sparkle. Also at 10, Music 1 convenes in Paine Hall. A full course, Music cannot be entered now, but lectures and especially the listening hours are ideal for auditors. This term's work begins with Beethoven and runs through to the moderns. The listening hours, in Paine Hall Auditorium, are as follows: Monday at 9, Tuesday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CLASSGOER | 2/9/1950 | See Source »

Other signers of the statement were: Albert Einstein, Thomas Mann, Olin Downes, Professor Thomas Emerson, Judge Norval K. Harris, Dr. John A. Kingsbury, Professor Robert Lynd, Carey McWilliams, Professor Philip Morrison, Professor Linius Pauling, Dr. Walter Rautenstrauch, I. F. Stone, and Professor Colston E. Warne...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mather Protests Judicial Censure In Loyalty Trials | 2/2/1950 | See Source »

Divorced. Elliott Roosevelt, 39, peripatetic author (As He Saw It); by Faye Emerson Roosevelt, actress (cinema, theater, radio, TV), his third wife (he was her second husband); after five years of marriage, no children; in Cuernavaca, Mexico...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Jan. 30, 1950 | 1/30/1950 | See Source »

...aristocrat is irresistible when he goes in for democracy." He risked his life repeatedly, faced mobs with the hauteur of a nobleman awaiting the guillotine, and dissipated his fortune in charities. In an age of florid oratory he stirred his listeners with a lean, precise, deadly effective style. When Emerson heard him, he felt as if "the whole air was full of splendors." A Virginia paper called him "an infernal machine set to music...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: American Agitators | 1/30/1950 | See Source »

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