Word: light
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Fair Good 83 3 new powder Canaan, N.H. Fair Good 20 Cannon Mt. (Tramway) N.H. Snowing Good 105 3 new powder Conway, N.H. Fair Good 32 1 new powder Dartmouth Region, N.H. Fair Good 20 Franoonia Netch, N.H. Snowing Good 60 3 new powder Fryeburg, Me. Fair Good 44 Light Greenfield, Mass. Fair Fair 4 Breakable crust Intervale, N.H. Fair Good 33 3 new powder Jackson, N.H. Fair Good 34 2 new powder Lacenia (Gilford) N.H. Fair Good 27 1 new powder Lancaster, N.H. Cloudy Good 28 4 new powder Lincoln, N.H. Fair Good 41 6 new powder Littleton...
...matter how varied her roles, Clandette Colbert gilds them with her own delightful personality and carries a Midas-touch of success. Despite its title, "Midnight" takes her from moonlight romance to a light-hearted Paris where she can romp with royalty but feel more at home with taxi-drivers. It is a sprightly picture, never convulsing the audience with laughter, but leaving it happy and satisfied. It has faults, to be sure, a trite plot and some forced situations, but Miss Colbert sweeps it along to victory. Right by her side is John Barrymore perfect as ever and clearly...
...great virtue in Dean Sperry's treatment of his material is his impersonality. A less skillful writer would have tried to force his own beliefs into his study of others. Dean Sperry, however, meets the layman on his own ground, discussing the material in the light of modern psychology, modern philosophy, and modern literary thought. He does not seek to glorify or debase but merely to explain in terms of modern thought what these "Classics of Christian Devotion" were trying to say. The reader is left to judge for himself whether what was said was worth saying...
...suggestion may be offered, it is that the editors would appeal to a larger audience than tthe student Union by going light on controversy, in which little talent has been displayed except by their opponents. The journalistic "sting" is a device that has been worn threadbare by the Progressive's elder brothers...
...There is no reason to believe that the Class of 1942 is more anti-election than previous freshman classes. There is rather contrary evidence if the circulation of last year's abolition petition--which was much wider than that of the present one--means anything at all. In the light of this, it would seem that Yardlings have in the past been driven to the polls against their wills. Just as the Communists would force the workers to be free, the Student Council has forced the Freshmen to be "democratic", and has met all protest with investigations which followed...