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Word: chieftains (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...intends to give at the Boston Opera House some of the great plays from Shakespeare, with one or another pieces thrown in for certainly varied and perhaps balanced entertainment. The company although not a notable one is thoroughly creditable and quite capable of furnishing sufficient background for its chieftain. Mr. Hampden plays with careful eye for values studiously attained; all his roles are interesting, but his Hamlet, his Shylock, and his Othello are performances that make one understand why people can go to see Shakespeare, as they would go again and again to hear a Beethoven symphony, and find...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 1/8/1923 | See Source »

...privacy and simplicity of the last rites in honor of Theodore Roosevelt will not prevent the American people from standing as one great mourning family at the dead chieftain's bier today. The tributes that have been paid to him by the great and little of the nation--of all nations--are of perfect sincerity, and sometimes of a degree of emotion that almost chokes their utterance, but all are inadequate, all seem commonplace in the light of his own greatness, which has not died with him, which cannot fade from the earth, and which will, with time, inspire...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Last Honors. | 1/9/1919 | See Source »

...free verse seems strained and unhappy; the idea of the same poet's "Art" deserves a better expression. Mr. Allinson contributes to the campaign literature of the day, recently dignified (or chinafied, as many have it), by the pen of Dr. Eliot, a glowing eulogium on Woodrow Wilson, "greater chieftain of the higher mind." With this qualifying phrase many Republicans will no doubt agree; the Presidential mind at present is so high that Germany and Mexico have quite lost sight of it. Mr. Snow's "Post Mortem" is rather gruesome stuff, but it exemplifies the correct field for free verse...

Author: By R. CUTLER ., | Title: Sir Herbert Tree Treated at Length in Current Advocate | 10/24/1916 | See Source »

...Blackmur '15, the music by M. F. Hall '15 and B. H. Poucher '16 and the lyrics by B. S. Davison '16. The scene of the play is laid in a mythical kingdom in southern Europe and the story deals with the love affair of a robber chieftain and the princess of the country, which involves many amusing and surprising incidents...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PI ETA TO GIVE MUSICAL FARCE | 1/13/1915 | See Source »

...Cele's mother was the sister of the Zulu king, and his father the chief of one of the principal tribes of that race. His father gave up his position as chieftain to become a missionary, sending his son to the Slater School in Winston Salem, North Carolina, and later to the Hampton Institute in Hampton, Virginia. Mr. Cele there spent seven years, and has just been graduated. During his course, he was President of the Y. M. C. A., captain of the first Company, and end on the football team...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SON OF ZULU CHIEF TO SPEAK | 11/6/1913 | See Source »

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