Word: gored
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Professor Copeland has read several times already this year. He delighted a large audience of Freshmen in Gore Hall earlier this year, and his selections at Christmas time were received by an enthusiastic audience...
...Gore Hall's basketball team, with a smashing 37-19 defeat of Smith has kept its position at the top of the Freshman Dormitory League and has run its string of victories to five. L. F. Hagopian '32 and C. A. Parmiter '32, Gore's stars, continued their scoring with six and five field goals, respectively. In Wednesday's other contest McKinlock and Standish battled to keep out of the cellar of the league. McKinlock won, 30-22, largely on the playing of R. H. Simonds...
...plan which was finally accepted calls for the completion of the Houses by the fall of 1930; one on a plot of land north of Gore Hall and bounded by Plympton, Mt. Auburn, and Holyoke Streets; the other on a triangular lot adjoining Memorial Drive just east of McKinlock Hall. In the case of the former, however, it was advisable to alter Holyoke Street at the southern end, where there is an awkward bend in it; while the construction of the second House would be hampered, if not prevented, by Colonial Way, which cuts the triangular lot into halves...
...matter how the creators of cultured men feel about it, the fact remains that very few students meet those ancient authors of whose distant fame they have heard since their Gore Hall period, until the melancholy days of Divisionals are near. So the Vagabond was pleasantly surprised to learn that Sophocles' tragedy Electra was being presented at Eliot Hall, Jamaica Plain. There he found the ancient drama excellently played against a background of temple and poplars, with a cast directed by a former member of the 47 Workshop. With the altruistic spirit typical of better-class Vagabonds, he sought information...
...psychic waves, deadly chemicals, and amateur theatricals find them sufficient. The Secret of Secrets (Clode, $2) is a purely scientific invention, and yet the most improbable people seem to have stolen it?quaint rustics, fake priest, German spy, vamp. The Diamond Murders (Dodd, Mead, $2) reeks with dope and gore for the sake of the Maharanee of Dahlcurrie's necklace; is nevertheless pleasantly credible...