Word: misses
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Atlantic. Though few of these gamblers flew solely to further aviation and a majority were killed trying, the effect of the transoceanic stunt flights was to boom aviation's popularity and technical progress. No matter how sporting her plans are, it is a fair question to ask what good Miss Earhart is achieving by her type of action at the present stage of aviation...
...Crimson leader announced that the first week will be devoted exclusively to Freshmen. "We don't want to miss any material at all, and to be fair about it, we want to judge Freshmen only in competition with themselves at first," Harlow said...
Under the guise of a meeting on "The Aesthetic Factor in Education", the 46th annual Conference of the Harvard Teachers' Association will be entertained Saturday afternoon by Pauline Chellis, well-known concert dancer, at Sanders Theater. Miss Chellis will feature a discussion lead by Dr. Payson Smith on the place of art in education. Although dancing is an innovation in the Association's policies, the "lecture demonstration" is expected to be of considerable value, since Miss Chellis is one of the "foremost educators" in the field of modern dance...
Finding her inspiration in the facts behind the witchcraft of Salem, Miss Winwar proceeds to enlighten and embellish their horror as well as their beauty with the result that the spirit of the times is once more captured and the reader can more easily understand the forces at work to create such a reign of terror. The hatred and intolerance of the straight-laced but hypocritical Puritans with their cast iron moral codes and their frigid attitude is set in striking contrast with the loyalty, the courage, and the affection of their brothers. The narrowness and prejudice of the Puritan...
...leading part, that of the tragic Thomas a Becket, will be played by E. Irving Locke, of Boston, veteran Broadway player. New additions to the cast are Richmond Holder '40; David Langworthy '40; Robert W. Woodward '40; and Miss Marjorie Sanford, of Boston. The director of the current T. S. Eliot drama is William B. Berssenbrugge '37, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin...