Word: reade
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Particular emphasis will be paid to those works frequently read in class, but not often heard. Mr. Dietz plans to interpret various classicists, including Schiller, go the, Wildenbruch, and German translations from Shakespeare. He may also do "Sein doer nicht Sein, Das ist die Frage," which has had great success on the English and American stage, under Mr. Dietz' handling...
Robert S. Hillyer, '17, associate professor of English, spoke before an informal gathering in the Adams House Common Room last night. Centering his talk about his philosophy, Professor Hillyer read a number of his own poems, including several selections from his "Collected Works" published...
...blurbs. In a drastic step to make news columns safe for news stories Inman Gray's Journal, Clark Howell's Constitution, and William Randolph Hearst's Georgian had just entered an agreement to forbid almost every conceivable method of getting free space. Newshawks grinned as they read instructions which explained in detail just what sort of stories could not be passed by the copy desk. Outlawed were...
...surface lived the typical life of a well-to-do Englishman, which included frequent fox-hunts with conservative companions. Behind this façade, Engels supported Marx financially, arranged for the publication of his work, kept an Irish mistress, studied military strategy in preparation for the World Revolution. Reading constantly, Engels learned "to stutter in 20 languages," learned Persian in three weeks, once wrote that he was going to take a fortnight off to master Gothic before studying Old Nordic and Old Saxon. Less ambitious, Marx merely studied Russian, Serbian, Slavic. In one period when he could not work...
...Chateau, lost when the chateau was blown up, found in 1933 when a garbled copy of the original was already going to press. Readers whose suspicions are awakened by such remarkable coincidences may be made more doubtful by the narrative speed and fluency of the memoirs, the dialogs which read like passages from a good novel, the portrait of Napoleon, which agrees so exactly with that of modern research. But they will be unable to discover contradictions or vagueness in the work itself, are likely to be convinced that it is "the most impressive close-up of Napoleon that...