Word: lymans
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...composed of Charles T. Copeland '82, Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, Emeritus, George H. Chase '96, Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, James B. Munn '12, Professor of English, Delmar Leighton '17, Dean of Freshmen, Wilbur J. Bender '27, Assistant Dean of Harvard College, and Lyman H. Butterfield, Instructor in English...
Miss Colbert performs admirably, and emulates her role of the suffering Sally Trent as a torch singer under the assumed name of Mimi Benton, with a soothing croon which is good enough for any night club. Her wispy overtones are accompanied by the sweet harmony of Abe Lyman's band, and her "Give Me Liberty or Give Me Love," has more direct bearing on the plot than theme songs in most movies we have seen recently...
...York; Loomis, Edward A. Drew of Cambridge, Massachusetts; Middlesex, Theodore C. Osborne of Boston, Massachusetts; Milton, Rogers B. Horgan of Washington, D. C.; Noble & Greenough, Robert A. Little of Bar Harbor, Maine; St. George's, Walter R. Lucas, Jr. of Providence, Rhode Island; St. Mark's, John L. Lyman of Waltham, Massachusetts; St. Paul's, Willard H. Griffin of Manchester, New Hampshire; Thayer, Lee W. Mather of Randolph, Massachusetts...
...enrollment 200. Stanford University lifted the limitation on female students which Mrs. Leland Stanford wrote into its charter in 1899. Fearing that women might some day outnumber men. she decreed that no more than 500 be enrolled. But Stanford has lately felt pinched. Hoping for bigger income, President Ray Lyman Wilbur pointed out another clause in the charter, stipulating a "university of high degree." He cunningly argued that the limitation clause made this impossible. Stanford's trustees agreed. Stanford's 3,000 males grumbled. With the passing of "the 500" there died the practice of calling...
Pantothenic Acid apparently is a common ingredient of all living stuff. Professor Roger John Williams (Oregon State Agricultural College), who discovered the substance with his associate Carl M. Lyman, has found it in humans, worms, oysters, plant molds, bacteria and algae. Declared they: "It is probably safe to say that it is more widely distributed in Nature than any known physiologically potent substance." Data so far accumulated indicates that pantothenic acid's molecule is composed of long chains of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, that it contains no sulphur or nitrogen. The stuff is potent. A speck of Professor Williams...