Word: iv
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...mortal coil. Young Dole was educated at Oahu College, and then went to Williams College. He received his law training in Boston and returned again to the Islands, but still the great 200, 300, 400 Ib. monarchs, begarlanded, strutted on their way ?an illustrious dynasty, Kamehameha III, Kamehameha IV, Kamehameha V, Lunalilo, Kalakaua. A Mormon colony settled there; an adventurer came up from Sumatra, Walter Murray Gibson, and became Minister; prohobition was abolished; Chinese settlers came, Spaniards, Japanese, Portuguese. A lottery was chartered, medicine men and opium venders were licensed...
...Lect. Hall Mr. Mitchell, Sects. M1, M2, M3, M4 New Lect. Hall Greek G 1 Allen Stensland Sever 29 Thomas Yakubisin Sever 30 Greek 8 Sever 30 History 11 Aldrich Conkey Harvard 2 Cock Zanetti Harvard 6 History 55 Sever 36 Italian 3 Geol. Lect. Rm. Mathematics A IV. Mr. Garabedian's section 1 Sever 35 Mr. Marden's section 3 Sever 35 Mr. Stabler's section 2 Sever 32 Mathematics C Sec. III Harvard 5 Mathematics 2 Sec. III Harvard 3 Mathematics 29 Sever 23 Music 1a Music Bldg. 4 Music 4c Sever 30 Physics 4b Geol, Lect...
...victory of Pilot Van Orman made him world's champion balloonist for this year. Last month he won the Litchfield Trophy by flying the Goodyear IV from Little Rock, Ark., 780 miles to Petersburg, Va. (TIME, May 10, AERONAUTICS). Boettner and the Akron N. A. A. finished second in that race. Pilot Van Orman also won the Litchfield Trophy last year with a flight of 1,072 miles. His avoidance of the Baltic Sea last week reflected a lesson learned in the Bennett race last year when he and the Goodyear III dropped into the Atlantic, being rescued...
...Henry IV. The Players for their annual all-star revival unfolded the tempestuous and unfamiliar lengths of the first part of Henry IV. They did it resonantly, picturesquely, a trifle tiresomely. Their Falstaff was the rotund and eminently genial Otis Skinner, a fine actor. Mr. Skinner took it into his head that the rogue should be played hygienically. His Falstaff was a beaming and unvicious figure. One could not help feeling that he would make his next entrance down the chimney with a pack on his back instead of through the scullery door with a wench by the hair...
...first part of Henry IV is an unwieldy play of many scenes and conflicting purposes. It is a mixture of low comedy and romantic melodrama. It has probably never played very well. It has not played at all in Manhattan for 30 years. The Players' resuscitation, exceedingly commendable in intent and reasonably efficient in effect, was restricted to a single week...