Word: brunswicks
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...awards given by the Sons of the American Revolution for Mil Sci 2 and Mil Sci 1 were presented to Querdon H. Nelson '45 of Lowell House and New Brunswick, New Jersey and William W. Dunn '46 of Winthrop House and New York respectively...
...awards given by the Sons of the American Revolution for Mil Sci 2 and Mil Sci 1 will be presented to Guerdon H. Nelson '45 of Lowell House and New Brunswick, New Jersey and William W. Dunn '46 of Winthrop House and New York respectively...
...Ellington keeps poking his head in, it's because he keeps making news. This time it's in the form of two fine albums of re-issue, one Victor and one Brunswick, now a Decca subsidiary. The Brunswick has the edge in quality, and the advantage of having many sides unavailable for more than ten years. "Birmingham Breakdown" is remarkable for being the only Ellington with a Dixieland breakdown ending, and "Wall Street Wail" has always been one of my favorites...
Then again, the Brunswick records are twenty five cents more cache, and the surfaces are the same miserable Decca surfaces. In addition, three titles are duplicated in the two albums though the performances are different: "East St. Louis Toodle-Oo," "The Mooche," and "Mood Indigo," The first two should be in every collection because of Bubber Miley's fabulous growl trumpet...
...Brunswick announces as forthcoming a Red Nichols album, featuring the early work of Jack Teagarden, Benny Goodman, Joe Sullivan, Babe Rusin and others. Also a Pine-Top Smith album, with four sides by the supposed originator of b--g--e--w--g--c, one of which has not been reissued before. It is a pity that the only really issued before. It is a pity that the only really other records besides jazz, has the poorest surfaces. But they do make money without playing cheap tricks on record collectors