Word: chaplins
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...stead of "Mighty Like a Moose" and Charlie Chaplin in "Shoulder Arms" an all star cast in "Somewhere in Somewhere" and Charlie Chaplin in "A Dog's Life" are the moving pictures which will be shown at the Sophomore Smoker to be held tonight at 7.30 o'clock in the Living Room of the Union, according to an announcement by E. W. Sexton, Chairman of the Smoker Committee...
...evening of March 16, it was announced last night by F. A. Clark Jr., Vice-President of the class and in charge of the Smoker. At the same time it was announced by E. W. Sexton, Chairman of the Smoker Committee, that "Mighty Like a Moose" and Charlie Chaplin in "Shoulder Arms" are the two moving pictures which will be shown. Sexton will also preside at the affair...
Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow one may expect the breathless query--did you see Chaplin plain? A lady harpist, who has also the distinction of being married to the man who illustrated "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," Koussevitsky, and Charles Spencer Chaplin, have united to form the complete glorification of Sanders Theatre...
Perhaps this is a reward to the faithful, and a proof that Symphony concerts are not in vain. Certainly the subscribers to the series never foresaw when they trod their ways to those simple, unassuming Thursday evenings, that ultimately fame would come--fame and Mr. Chaplin. But the scandal sheets have headlined the affair, not as praising the advent of culture and Rimsky-Korsokof in Cambridge, but as announcing the presence of a much married man. This is as it should be: the tabloid has its story: Mrs. Chaplin sees Memorial Hall when it is most imposing--in the dead...
...have been intending to cancel my subscription to TIME for the same reason the Rev. Father and Mr. Applegate give. "The Chaplin case" [TiME, Jan. 24] has decided it. The Literary Digest gives me all the news without filth thrown...