Word: wows
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...University Law School debating clubs, which have been discontinued since 1916, have been reorganized, and the competition for the Ames' Prize will again be held. The clubs are as follows: Beale, Brandeis, George Gray, Kent, Marshall, Park, Parsons, Pollock, Pound, Pow Wow, Scott, Smith, Thayer, Witenagemot, Wyman...
...writer constructs a very neat case against the war maniacs. There is a certain cold charm in the temperance and lucidity of his style--a charm which we encounter frequently in the best work of the so-called "Pacifist" school, and which is in happy contrast to the bow-wow of the opposite camp. Mr. Reniers concludes his article on the moving Picture in this issue. Though a little slow-moving, it is clearly patterned and has been written with pains. The "Agrippina" of Mr. Lyman Dudley lacks what so many historical productions lack,--a sense of atmosphere. Mr. Burrows...
...reached the fifth round and the clubs are now arguing their cases. To date the Thayer Club is ahead with an average of 1,000, having won all its cases thus far. The other clubs are closely bunched with the scores varying from 700 to 500. Pow Wow, however, is far in the rear with an average of 0. The drawings for the fifth round are as follows: Witanagemot vs. Kent, Lowell vs. Parsons, Moody vs. Beale, Westengard vs. Warren, Williston vs. Thayer, Geo. Gray vs. Pow Wow. The briefs for the sixth round are due Monday and the cases...
...standing of the clubs in the qualifying tournament at the end of the third round follows: 100 per cent., Beale, Thayer, Witanagemot; 67 per cent., George Gray, Kent, Lowell, Westengard, Warren; 500 per cent., Parsons; 33 per cent.; Ames Gray, Moody, Williston; 0 per cent., Pow Wow. Bryce, Marshall, Pound, and Cooley have dropped out. The fourth round of the qualifying tournament will be argued December 13 to 18, and the fifth round, January...
...case suggestive of a universal problem. The character study "Truth is Stranger" involves definite types and fairly accurate dialect in a story which, true or not, might well have been sacrificed to one more plausible. Nature perhaps, but not art, "looks after her freaks." One doubts, too, whether "Kernham! Wow!" will strike many as congruous with a Maine handy man. A really charming narrative, allegedly autobiographical, in the manner of Rhibany, is Ben Lion Trynin's "Rosalie." The truth here to child life, the healthy human interest--even with comedy overdone--are indeed preferable to the usual run of undergraduate...