Word: ardened
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...dies. Her daughter Lou is happy when she and her husband Chappy are poor. When her baby son dies she almost dies too. Chappy becomes a feature comedian, they live in luxury; but Lou drinks herself to death. Her daughter Iris goes on the stage, marries Pat Arden. Everything goes well until Pat is unfaithful with a girl Iris hates. Iris does not mind the unfaithfulness but she does mind the girl. Though Pat still loves Iris and she still loves him, their marriage and Iris' life are hurt beyond repair...
Died. Mrs. Rue Winterbotham Carpenter, 53, interior decorator, wife of Businessman-Composer John Alden Carpenter; of cerebral hemorrhage; in Chicago. Mrs. Carpenter, president of the Chicago Arts Club, superintended art work for the rooms of the Double Six Club in Manhattan's new Waldorf-Astoria, for the Elizabeth Arden Building...
This Brill. Dr. Abraham Arden Brill's characterization of Abraham Lincoln as a schizoid-manic personality (TIME, June 15) must be painful to teachers who hold Lincoln as a model for their pupils. "But who is this Dr. Brill?* Teachers have never before heard of him. What do other psychiatrists say? . . . Teachers, before accepting his conclusions, would want to see an analysis of the doctor's own mentality." (James William Crabtree, secretary of the Association...
Most movie critics are women. Best movie critic of the year-that is, the one who made the most successful forecasts about box office accomplishments of first run films-was not from New York City, but from Chicago. She was "Doris Arden" of the Chicago Times (a tabloid), who went to 262 movies, guessed right 183 times, wrong 73 times, made the winning percentage of 69.8%. Last year Miss Arden happened to be two women: Eleanor Keen and Muriel Vernon whom she succeeded in October. Miss Keen has a Ph.D. from Columbia, never saw more than three films a year...
...Abraham Arden Brill of Manhattan, a Freud disciple, was scheduled to read a paper on "Abraham Lincoln as a Humorist." Lincoln, from what Dr. Brill has been able to learn out of Lincoln biographies, was a schizoidmanic. That appellation is not so horrendous as it seems in type. A schizoid is a "split personality." He has subtle conflicts among the psychic components of his personality. A manic is a moody person, one subject to fits of exaltation and depression. When a manic or a schizoid or any type of mental aberration annoys his neighbors, they call him crazy and have...