Word: whitmanic
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...combined Eliot-Whitman team topped a strong but shorthanded. Moors Hall squad, 1 to 0, in yesterday's intramural field hockey match at the Radcliffe quadrangle. Briggs Hall then rolled up three points against a scoreless commuters' team, while Cabot outscored Bernard and Bertram...
Intramurals in field hockey will start tomorrow with three half hour contests. Moors will line up against Whitman and Eliot at 3 p.m., Cabot against Bertram and Barnard at 3:30 p.m., and Briggs against the commuters at 4 p.m. Playoffs will be scheduled later...
Wilder will give the second lecture of the series, entitled "Thereon, or the Rean-Row in the Wilderness," November 15. "Emily Dickinson, or the Articulate Inarticulate" will follow on November 29, and the final lecture, "Walt Whitman and the American Loneliness" will be given December...
...lyrical best, Frost owns a discipline of manner, an immaculate matching of thought and image, a native American voice unsurpassed by any American poet since Walt Whitman. For all his scorn of technical talk, he is as artful a technician as U.S. poetry has known...
Front-Office Punch. The man who made the Journal what it is today is Harry Johnston Grant, a square, muscular dynamo of a man with white hair and bloodshot blue eyes. An omnivorous reader, he is also an overpowering talker with a Walt Whitman-like flood of words (studded with four-letter ones) and a sincere belief that the successful operation of the paper is a public trust. He is purposely unknown to most Milwaukeeans. He declines most social invitations, has few friends, fearing that outsiders might try to influence the paper. He is also an enigma to most...