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Sirs: . . . Thank you for the story on Borah of Idaho. J. W. MASON Hartford, Conn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Feb. 19, 1940 | 2/19/1940 | See Source »

With Saradjeff gone there was the problem of finding someone to play the bells. For a while tow professors from Columbia and Smith alternated on successive Sundays (in those days the bells were played every week, if not more often). Mason Hammond '25, associate professor of Classics and History, and at that time head tutor of Lowell House, who had acquired a penchant for playing the bells, performed between times when occasions arose on which it was deemed fitting for the bells to be rung...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Music Professor Rings Lowell House Bells Since Imported Russian Ringer Drank Ink in Stillman | 1/22/1940 | See Source »

Only Don Donahue and Mason Fernald remain to run the hurdles. Fernald has been kept from practice by a knee injury until recently. Roger Schafer, who turned in a consistently superior low hurdle performance last year, will not run this season...

Author: By Paul I. Carp, | Title: Spirit Will Assist Decimated Cinder Squad Through 1940 Season--Mikkola | 1/9/1940 | See Source »

...week Artist Wood's first big canvas in three years, Parson Weems' Fable, went on display at the Associated American Artists' Galleries in Manhattan. Like the usual Wood, its spongy trees are set in a smoothly stylized landscape. But it is also a deft period piece. Mason Locke Weems was an itinerant parson and book agent, pioneer in fictionized biography. Unauthenticated is his pious anecdote of young George Washington and the cherry tree. Artist Wood has the worthy parson drawing back a cherry-red, cherry-edged curtain to show a tiny, Stuart-faced Washington, complete with powdered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Period Piece | 1/8/1940 | See Source »

Besides summarizing hundreds of plays and spotting hundreds of players and playwrights, the book touches such stray topics as theatrical cemeteries, the 36 Dramatic Situations, explains a mass of technical terms and theatre lingo. Experts have written its longer articles: Raymond Massey on Acting, John Mason Brown on Criticism, Lucius Beebe on First Nights, William Fields on Press Agents, Aline Bernstein on Costumes, Arthur Richman on Playwrighting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: Who, What, When, Where, How | 12/25/1939 | See Source »

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