Word: westons
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...Dunster House squash team strengthened its position in the second division of Class D in the Massachusetts Squash Racquets League Saturday afternoon by blanking the Weston Golf Club, 5 to 0, at the Dunster House courts...
Died. Sir William Mills, 75, inventor of the hand grenade, 75 millions of which were supplied to the Allied armies during the War; of heart disease; in Weston-super-Mare, England...
...Racquets League. The only team to win was the University Class C team, which defeated the Harvard Club team C three to two. The University A Whites did not play. Next Saturday the University B team meets the Union Boat Club B team and the C team plays the Weston Golf Club C team, both matches to be played at the Linden Street Courts, while the Freshman C team plays the Harvard Club C team at the Harvard Club. The 1935 team D players succumbed to the devices of a crafty Medical School five which beat the Harvard first year...
Speaking of the value of talking pictures as a supplement to lectures, W. H. Weston, Jr., Professor of Cryptogamie Botany and Chairman of the Department of Botany, said that lack of the desired type of films would hinder the frequent use of the machine for some years to come. Ordinary motion pictures will be shown almost exclusively for the present, pending the growth of a demand from colleges throughout the country sufficient to bring about the production of talks, for the study of academic subjects. There are, however, a few such films in existence and it is expected that these...
...under amazing, pugnacious Alfred Stieglitz. Beside Photographer Stieglitz, they were: Edward Steichen (now photogra-pher-in-chief to the Conde Nast publica-tions), Gertrude Kasebier and the late Clarence White. Also included in last week's exhibition were prints by the younger Paul Strand, Charles Sheeler, Ed- ward Weston. The work of these photographers has often been shown, always been praised. Prints on view last week were admirable, priced at from $20 for the work of modest Edward Weston to the $1.000 which didactic Alfred Stieglitz thought his prints were worth. Many critics paused longer in the first part...