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Word: bullen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...days but here is a maiden whose technique is neither kittenish nor hoydenish. Motherless Letty Monckton is a British country gentlewoman with as much poise as poetry about her. Her flight from the bosom of Moncktonism?father, manor, cousins, suitor ?to the humbler hearth and home of Andrew Bullen, tweeded biologist, is not like the flapping of a decapitated chicken but like the career of a startled teal, which will explore other ponds before circling back to an inviting one nearby...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Non-Fiction | 2/28/1927 | See Source »

...Kirby of Cornell, R. P. Bullen of Cornell, and R. O. Udall of Dartmouth, who placed first, second, and third respectively last year, will all be in the running again. It was the absence of Captain J. W. Burke '23, who was occupied in winning the 600 and 1000 yard runs, which lost the University an opportunity to score in that meet. In the coming contest however, the presence of J. N. Watters '26 should mean that a repetition of that performance is by no no means a foregone conclusion. It will be Watter's first University mile so that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON WILL MEET STIFFEST OPPOSITION IN MILE EVENT | 2/8/1924 | See Source »

There is a power and vitality in Shakespeare's play that reminds one somewhat of some modern drama. Here we see the eternal triangle, in this case King Henry, Queen Katharine and Anne Bullen; here we have the noble here, condemned to death by the wily villain, heroically bidding the crowd goodby. Here, too, is the court room scene, but (Heaven be praised!) no one recognizes the prosecuting attorney as a long lost father, or vice- versa. There is a ball room scene, a garden scene--who says that Shakespeare isn't modern? The lights and shadows of King Henry...

Author: By W. H. M. ., | Title: The Theatre in Boston | 10/17/1916 | See Source »

...turn of the tide, arrogant in his power, forward even in his fall. Miss Mathison's Queen Katharine was good, as her parts usually are. She is best, as always when subdued, tending to become theatrical when roused to any great pitch of emotion. Miss Mackay's Anne Bullen could hardly have been bettered, portraying as it did the willful, attractive personality of Henry's second wife. But the master characterization of all was Lyn Harding's King Henry. The easy going, blustering, good-natured king, slow to anger, but strong in his wrath when aroused, was played to perfection...

Author: By W. H. M. ., | Title: The Theatre in Boston | 10/17/1916 | See Source »

...Cutler '19; S. C. Wu uC. vs. C. P. Richter 1L; P. M. Hamilton '20 vs. A. Kirk '20; R. L. Hobbs '17 vs. E. H. Morse '20; E. B. Benedict '18 vs. F. K. Veach 1L; D. L. Brown 2L vs. A. M. Reed 1L; W. B. Bullen 2D vs. W. C. Clark '19; C. W. Brown '20 vs. D. K. Dunmore '18; W. D. D. Morgan '18 vs. A. Claflin '20; P. B. Boyden '18 vs. P. F. Le Fevre; J. Carlson '19 vs. C. de Zaldo...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RACQUET MEN TO GET BUSY | 10/2/1916 | See Source »

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