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...Steven Vincent Benet and 'John Brown's Body'," Dr. Carpenter, Sever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Student Vagabond | 11/12/1930 | See Source »

...hand. Often the transition from one crisis in Lincoln's career to another is so abrupt as to seem superficial. In part this is because of the limitations which program-time impose on the film's structure (it lasts only 100 minutes). The dialog by Poet Stephen Vincent Benet is less a factor in the picture's success than the masterly acting of Walter Huston in the title role. Sometimes in appearance he is a double for the familiar pictures of Lincoln?; sometimes, particularly in the earlier scenes as the backwoods lawyer without the beard and the weary dignity that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures Sep. 8, 1930 | 9/8/1930 | See Source »

...foremost candidates, with a few critics ranking California's Robinson Jeffers ahead of either. Robert Frost and Edwin Arlington Robinson are other candidates from New England. Carl Sandburg is the Midwest's best voice. Vachel Lindsay catches the whole jingle of American speech, and Stephen Vincent Benet caught last year's Pulitzer Prize. Last week at Columbia University a candidate for U. S. Poet was proposed who was no U. S. citizen, who never visited America or wrote about it, but whose works every schoolboy is supposed to know-John Milton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HEROES: Milton for Poet | 8/25/1930 | See Source »

...daughters have died), but in the summer the Norrises' 200-acre ranch at Saratoga, Calif, houses a cheerful bedlam of children?wards, cousins, children from miles around needful of home life and a good time. Among other fauna at the Norris ranch are children of Poet Columnist William Rose Benet whose first wife was Mrs. Norris's sister, the late Teresa Frances Thompson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Romance, Inc. | 7/14/1930 | See Source »

...Author. Apsley George Benet Cherry-Garrard was 24 when he went with Scott, did not write this book till 1922 because the War interfered. (This is the first U. S. edition.) During the War he was "in Flanders looking after a fleet of armored cars. A war is like the Antarctic in one respect. There is no getting out of it with honor as long as you can put one foot before the other." A believer in scientific exploration, Author Cherry-Garrard deprecates purely spectacular expeditions, thinks Amundsen's discovery of the South Pole was mostly that. Says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Antarctic | 5/12/1930 | See Source »

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