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...schedule is: Dec. 19, M.I.T.; Jan. 12, at Army; Feb. 2, Navy; Feb. 6, at Springfield; Feb. 9, Cornell; Feb. 16, Dartmouth; Feb. 22, at Penn; Feb. 23, at Princeton; Feb. 27, Brown; Mar. 2, at Columbia; Mar. 9, Yale; Mar. 14-16, Eastern Intercollegiates; Mar. 28-30, N.C.A.A. championships at North Carolina...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Swimming Schedule | 11/14/1956 | See Source »

...Northeastern, at the Boston Garden; Feb. 1 and 5, Bean Pot Tournament, at the Boston Garden; Feb. 2, at Brown; Feb. 7, Brown; Feb. 9, American International; Feb. 13, Boston College, at the Boston Arena; Feb. 16, at Dartmouth; Feb. 20, at Williams; Feb. 23, Tufts; Feb. 27, Dartmouth; Mar. 2, Yale, at the Boston Garden; Mar. 6, Princeton; Mar. 9, at Yale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hockey Team Holds 1st Practice; 18-Game Schedule Is Announced | 11/7/1956 | See Source »

Maryland: Leaders of both parties guess Ike by upwards of 50,000. Republican Senator John Mar shall Butler has a shaky lead over Democrat George Mahoney, who is afflicted by party factionalism. 9 Massachusetts: Stevenson figures to better 1952 margin (78,810) in Suffolk County (Boston), but Ike leads statewide...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: EISENHOWER LEADS STEVENSON | 11/5/1956 | See Source »

...adaptation as a study in mass psychology and realistic theatre. A close reading of the script or a few minutes of the low quality LP record, however, will cast doubts on the dramatic worth of the broadcast. Corny lines, private jokes, impossible flashbacks, impossible occurrences, and hackneyed lines mar whatever dramatic value might underlie the plot. Yet the mediocrity and incredibility of the script makes the psychological aspects of the original version all the more interesting...

Author: By Robert H. Sand, | Title: War of the Worlds | 10/30/1956 | See Source »

Unfortunately some technical imperfections date the pre-war film and mar its polish. The color reproduction is inferior, and the animation cannot always respond to the musical rhythms. But these irritations are swept aside by the sheer excitement of Fantasia's experimental efforts. And, perhaps most interesting, Disney's successes and failures throughout the film raise a host of questions concerning the relationship between musical and visual...

Author: By Peter R. Breggin, | Title: Fantasia | 10/25/1956 | See Source »

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