Word: fined
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Richard Dane, Yale '27: "Cambridge is a fine place, and I am losing my faith in Yale. I went down to New Haven to see the Army game, and my car was stolen. I went again to see the Yale-Princeton game, and my coat and hat were taken. I'm beginning to think Harvard's all right...
...most important evidence of all is the fine custom of allowing in the clubs only girls who have been engaged for at least three years to at least one member...
...scenes from the current fall production, and close-ups of members of the cast. This play, a wild-west drama by Mrs. E.H. Sullivan, called "The Chisholm Trail," will be presented at Brattle Hall in Cambridge, on the evenings of December 6, 7, 8, and 9; and at the Fine Arts Theatre in Boston, on the afternoon and evening of December...
...obliged with a few readings from the H.A.A. News, prefating his performance with a request that several of the northern portals be barricaded as there seemed to be a strong draught; that done, he pleaded for silence. The entertainment was never consummated, however, for the game resumed shortly. The Fine Arts enthusiast offered comments: "A delicate organization, that team, highly sensitive, nervous, and yet possessing a certain Renaissance delicacy which is quite charming, quite ..." He rumbled on, and not unit the final whistie did he conclude...
...observed it. In "Men Without Women", Mr. Hemingway presents a collection of fourteen short stories. Their protagonists are variously toreadors, snow birds, prize fighters, and other less important people. All the tales are tense, highly nervous situations, but in writing them. Mr. Hemingway does not himself become overwrought: with fine restraint, with a knife-like humor, the author recounts the tragedies and failures of his characters. He writes in the simplest possible terms, in starling pictures, as clear and sharp as snap-shots. In the dialogue, Mr. Hemingway maintains the tempo of his stories: exciting it is, intense, profane...