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Word: whitmanic (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Briggs will face a combined Whitman-Eliot team for the intramural field hockey championship Monday on the Quad. Yesterday, Whitman-Eliot beat Cabot 2 to 0, scoring both goals in five minutes overtime. Briggs is ahead by default over the off-campus houses...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Briggs Plays Whitman-Eliot In Field Hockey Final Today | 10/30/1952 | See Source »

...Edmands, 7 (S), 0 (E); Everett, 8 (S), 4 (E), 1 Hallinan; Gilman, 10 (S), 10 (E); Henry 2 (S), 3 (E); Holmes, 45(S), 33 (E), Hallinan 1, undecided 1; Moors, 41 (S), 39 (E), Hallinan 1; Peach, 2 (S), 9 (E); Saville, 7 (S), 1 (E); Whitman, 19 (S), 18 (E), undecided...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Henry, Peach, Cabot Vote for Eisenhower; CRIMSON to Publish Full Results Oct. 31 | 10/17/1952 | See Source »

Freshmen elected members to this committee as follows: Holmes, Helen Gardiner and Joan Rubinstein; Cabot, Anne Tyler and Ernestine Woodward; Eliot, Betty-Jo Linch; Whitman, Paula Morse and Anne Newman; Bertram, Carol Kirsch; Briggs, Sally Huntington and Nancy Leet; Barnard, Jeanne Jason and Virginia Winstead; Moors, Mary Jane Richards and Eleanor Smith; Commuters, Joan Harvey and Jeanmaric MacKelvie...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Radcliffe Accepts Council Revisions | 10/16/1952 | See Source »

Tonight, the classes of '55 and '56 will attend Radcliffe's first freshman sophomore dinner, in the four large dormitories. Upperclassman will eat in the remaining halls: Moors in Barnard, Cabot in Whitman, Briggs in Eliot, and Holmes in Bertram...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Radcliffe Pays Dues, Holds All-College Vote Today and Tomorrow | 10/14/1952 | See Source »

Agnes de Mille's new ballet takes off from the Walt Whitman line: "Life, life is the tillage/And death is the harvest according." Choreographer de Mille works out her ideas in three scenes, "Birth," "Games" and "The Harvest," the last in a Civil War setting. The ballet critics were giving it mixed notices ("A great new ballet," said the Herald Tribune. "Just run of de Mille," cracked the Daily News). But audiences seemed to like its romping "Games" scene and its suddenly gripping finale, where the heroine finds herself mateless and alone in a crowd of reunited soldiers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Comeback in Manhattan | 10/13/1952 | See Source »

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