Word: andersons
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...after next. Rochester's Howard Hanson wrote the music, Richard Leroy Stokes, critic of the defunct New York Evening World, the libretto. In Paris Alonzo (godsgate) Elliott, the Aleman who wrote "There's a Long, Long Trail,"- is busy making an opera out of Laurence Stallings & Maxwell Anderson's riproaring What Price Glory? In Vienna Composer Robert Russell Bennett (Kansas City) will spend the summer writing music for a libretto by smart, versatile Robert A. Simon of The New Yorker. Maria Melbern, an oldtime Spanish prima donna, will be the heroine. The scene will be downtown Manhattan...
...first match, between R. F. Evans '33 (D) and A. P. Balzerini '32 (W) was postponed; H. F. Williamson '32 (D) defeated A. B. Winthrop '32 (W), 6-4, 6-4; R. H. Bates '33 (D) defeated J. F. Anderson '33 (W), 6-1, 7-5; Northrup Beach '34 (D) defeated R. R. Daly '32 (W), 6-8, 7-5, 6-2; J. L. Noyes '34 (D) defeated E. S. Godfrey '34, 6-0, 1-6, 6-1; C. A. Abele '33 (W) defeated D. R. Davies '33 (D), 1-6, 6-4, 6-4; W. H. Horwitz...
Again the auditorium rang with cheers. Bishop Anderson had to repeat the section of his address dealing with the Press. The Board of Temperance, Prohibition & Public Morals began preparing copies of the section on Prohibition to send to President Hoover, Governor Roosevelt, Alfred Emanuel Smith and New York's Mayor Walker...
...other Methodist bishops present, who had helped to write the episcopal address which Boston's Bishop William Franklin Anderson was delivering, beamed in their chairs upon the platform. The 800-odd delegates and some 1,500 of their friends who crowded Atlantic City's Municipal Auditorium for the 31st quadrennial general conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church rose to their feet and cheered. It sounded like the old days when temperance cartoons depicted "the brewer's big horses" trampling down poor children, and the Saloon as a burly ogre digging graves for mankind, pointing with pride...
...Industry has as a rule given labor a grudging, insufficient wage," continued Bishop Anderson, "keeping it down by child exploitation, by suppression of legitimate organizations, and by other expedients, while at the same time huge fortunes have been amassed for the favored owners of the resources of production...