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Examination GroupFinal Examination I Friday, June 4 II Wednesday, June 2 III Thursday, May 27 IV Tuesday, June 1 V Thursday, June 3 VI Wednesday, May 26 VII Friday, May 28 VIII Friday, June 4 IX Friday, June 4 X Tuesday, June 8 XI Monday, June 7 XII Saturday, May 29 XIII Saturday, June 5 XIV Friday, May 28 XV Tuesday, June 8 XVI Tuesday, June 8 XVII Wednesday, May 26 XVIII Wednesday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Exams Will Be Held From May 26-June 8 | 4/13/1954 | See Source »

...studded Coldwater Canyon. Last week he had the house up for sale. In his intense and single-minded haste to go on conquering Hollywood, he has not even found time to use his swimming pool. "Jack," says Stanley Meyer, the protocol-conscious business manager of Webb's Mark VII Productions, "would live in one room with a cot and a movie projector...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Jack, Be Nimble! | 3/15/1954 | See Source »

...LETTERS OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT, VOLS. VII and VIII (1,621 pp.)-Edited by Elting E. Morison-Harvard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Constructive Radical | 3/1/1954 | See Source »

With Volumes VII and VIII, covering the years 1909 to 1919, Editor Morison and a 21-man research staff have finished their work of sorting and mounting Roosevelt's many-sided correspondence, a work which should provide future Roosevelt biographers with a fine photographic likeness to go by. Oyster Bay's leading Republican, who wrote some 25 books during his lifetime, was quite possibly the most literate tenant the White House ever had,* but he never let his erudition interfere with a good reporter's knack for saying what he had to say quickly and directly. This...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Constructive Radical | 3/1/1954 | See Source »

Dawson challenges this idea of the medieval man's remoteness. Modern civilization, he says, owes far more to men like St. Augustine and Pope Gregory VII than is admitted, and medieval men deserve the credit for much that is attributed to earlier or later periods. The modern world, for example, praises 16th century Renaissance humanists for reviving the Latin classics and scientific learning. Actually, says Dawson, it was medieval scholars who produced the really "new fact in the history of the West''-the rediscovery of Greek learning by the 13th century...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Case for Christendom | 2/15/1954 | See Source »

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