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Both elements occur in the so-called Mangan group of inorganic earth elements (i. e. manganese, chromium) and constitute about a billionth part of the earth's crust. Inert, their commercial and scientific value is unknown, probably small...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Masurium, Rhenium | 6/29/1925 | See Source »

...election held last night, the following men were elected to the board of the Advocate: Dudley Eaton Fitts '25, of Haverhill: John Joseph Sherry Mangan '26, of Lynn: and Henry Endicott Stebbins '27, of Milton. Fitts and Mangan were elected to the Literary Board and Stebbins was elected to the Business Board...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Advocate Elects Three | 3/17/1925 | See Source »

...Harold Eisenberg, Chairman, Miss Estelle Eisenberg; C. H. Tryner, Miss Evelyn Janowich; Sidney Myers, Miss Brownette Goldberg; Solomon Elsky, Miss Helen Elsky; Leo Berkowitz. Miss Sylvia Berkowitz; James Albert, Miss Mildred Levine; J. S. Mangan, Miss Sylvia Hale; D. S. Harrison, Miss Barbara Hoffman; Sidney Hoffman Jr., Miss Helen Grant; V. T. Braman, Miss Virginia Hale; Arthur Rubin, Miss Dorothy Landsbirger; Ralph Manheim, Miss Janice Tarlin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANNOUNCE BOX LISTS FOR JUNIOR FESTIVITY | 3/4/1925 | See Source »

Different from all these writers, Ralph Manheim in "Ballade" captures a good deal of Coleridgian magic, and incidentally refreshes a form often too much like a metrical exercise in other hands, by a variation that gives it something of the fluent melody of terzarima. John Sherry Mangan, an enthusiastic an energetic experimenter, indicates something of the range of his work in two sharply contrasting poems: "Disoriented", sapphics in which a strictly classic treatment of form encloses a romantic elaboration and decoration of feeling; and "the Passing of Shaughnessy" which fuses the fantasy and conceit of pre-classical phrasing in English...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVOCATE PROSE IS POETRY SAYS CODE | 1/22/1925 | See Source »

Turning again to the undergraduate contributors, Mr. Abbott's sonnet deserves especial praise; but we deplore Mr. Marshall's idiosyncrasies in the modern manner, both of matter and arrangement, and we confess to a down-right bitterness in regard to Mr. Mangan's "Crest". Mr. LaFarge's second contribution must bring our review to a close. It is a story, excellently conceived and skillfully written, perhaps too skillfully, for at the end there is little but its conpetence and its manner to carry it on. There is a sort of frustrate maturity about the Advocate at times which prevents...

Author: By Theodore Morrison, | Title: ADVOCATE DROPS SCHOOL FOR LITERARY MATTERS | 5/29/1924 | See Source »

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