Word: hampstead
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...announced the appointment of the following officers: Sidney Carroll '34, of Brooklyn, New York, president; Richard John Walsh, Jr. '34, of Pelham, New York, Ibis; Harold Willis Nichols '34, of Cincinnati, Ohio, Treasurer; Andrew Eliot Ritchie, Jr. '34, of Chestnut Hill, Secretary; Robert Blaine Murray, Jr. '34 of Hampstead, Maryland, Circulation Manager. These officers will form the executive board of the Lampoon for the coming year, extending to January...
...Wing '35 of Great Neck, Long Island, New York, and J. deB. Bertolet '35 of Reading, Pennsylvania to the Literary Board; Vincent Palmer '35 of Milton and W. H. Lewis, Jr. '35 of Mountain Lakes, New Jersey to the Art Board; and R. B. Murray '34 of Hampstead, Maryland, H. T. Pierpont, Jr. '35 of Worcester, and W. G. Barker, 2d '35 of Brookline to the Business Board...
...fall production of the Harvard Dramatic Club, according to announcement made last night by J. F. Joyce '33, president of the club. Although never before produced in this country, the play was presented in England where it enjoyed a very successful run at the Everyman's Theatre in Hampstead. Its author, Miss Temple, is comparatively unknown in America but has attained a considerable reputation in England where, like Jane Cowl, she frequently acts in her own plays...
...very much. Her children have an even dimmer idea of their mother's real nature. When the family conclave meets to decide her future, she shocks them all by deciding for herself. For 30 years Lady Slane has dreamed of living alone in a little house in Hampstead ; she has even had her eye on the house. Against her children's protests she retires thither, having made most unbusinesslike arrangements with the owner, eccentric Mr. Bucktrout. She lives there happily with her old French maid, seeing almost nobody until even more eccentric old Fitz-George, a millionaire miser...
Aflutter last week was Miss Muriel Lester of Kingsley Hall Settlement, Bow, who had just received a letter from her good friend Mahatma Gandhi that if & when he goes to London to confer with Prime Minister MacDonald he does not want to stay at Hampstead's Indian Hostel as expected, but at her settlement house. Reporters found Kingsley Hall very clean and neat, smelling slightly of disinfectant. It has a large flat roof from which St. Gandhi may survey the squalid East End, and a large bronze bell, presented by white-whiskered First Commissioner of Works George Lansbury...