Word: christensen
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University fellowships to: Josef Alexander '38, Theodore L. Agnew Jr., University of Illinois. Henry D. Aiken 1G, John Ashmead Jr. '38 James R. Balsley Jr., California Institute of Technology. Roger S. Bender 2G, Francis G. Blake Jr. '38 William H. Bond 1G, Halvor N. Christensen 1G, Arthur LeR. Cohen 1G, I Bernard Cohen 1G, Francis M. Cresson Jr., University of Pennsylvania Museum. Francis S. Doody, Tufts College. Avran Douglis, University of Chicago. Charles W. Dunn, McMaster University, Ontario. Gwynne B. Evans 1G, Mackarness H. Goode, Culver Military Academy...
...criticism to which the State Assembly stiffly replied: "It is deemed that such mural paintings truly depict and symbolize the history of the State. . . ." He gave a show at the College Union, lectured on art to farm boys in agriculture courses, went on field trips with Dean Chris Christensen of the College. His face-cracking, cherubic grin and piping voice made him popular with Wisconsin students. Question: How did all this affect the painting of a Kansan who six years ago put Kansas on the U. S. artistic...
Leverett O: l.e., Tenney. Weidling, Hausserman, Landry, Harkness, Seamans, Gibby. q., Spang. Rainsford, Daughadoy, Rabenold. Substitutes: Hamill, Dawes, Christensen, Day, Duncan, Heywood...
Sued for divorce in Trenton, N. J. last week was President Peter C. Christensen of Button Corp. of America, his wife charging that he had lavished a small fortune on a blonde artists' model, asking $1,000 per week alimony. Given this new idea of his wealth, Mr. Christensen's 400 employes promptly decided that he could afford to pay them better wages, walked out on strike. Up in a big black limousine drove Mrs. Christensen to cheer on the strikers, march for an hour in their picket line. Said Mr. Christensen, peering from behind his office curtains...
What Ballet Master George Balanchine and his collaborator Paul Tchelitchev offered was the most inept production that present-day operagoers have witnessed on the Metropolitan stage. The bereaved Orpheus was personified by Lew Christensen, a tall, strapping young man from Portland, Ore., who wore black trunks, black mitts, a black cape and a lyre on his back, expressed his sorrow by thrusting his fists into the air, swaying before a funereal mound which could easily have covered scores of Eurydices. Muscular William Dollar, a native of St. Louis, leaped into the picture as Amor (Love), wearing white tights and great...