Word: darte
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...Flying Trapeze. Throughout the opera, the ballad tune dum-diddled along, festooned with Composer Bennett's shiniest orchestral and harmonic tricks. Best original snatch was sung by a clown: Which way does a young man start when a young man's heart has a well-known dart stuck away down low? Which way does a young girl turn when her arms both yearn and her lips both burn with a well-known glow? Ah, lackaday, how do I say to you which way they go? This week Composer Bennett performs a clarinet concerto dedicated to Benny Goodman...
...Final Individual Scoring Records Games Gls. Fls. Pts. Broberg, Dart. 12 65 34 164 Hasslinger, Col. 12 64 28 156 J. Bennett, Cor. 12 47 41 135 Olsen, Dart. 12 51 28 130 Cobb, Yale 12 42 28 112 Cerrone, Col. 12 42 27 111 Romano, Har. 12 45 21 111 Buckley, Har. 12 47 16 110 Levinson, Penn. 12 38 24 100 Zilly, Yale 12 40 18 98 Dunbar, Cor. 12 37 22 96 Viguers, Penn. 12 36 16 88 Carmichael, Prin. 12 39 9 87 Munroe, Dart. 12 31 21 83 Winston, Prin...
Wendell L. Willkie waited until he was back in Manhattan last week to give his answer to a question topmost in the mind of many a U. S. businessman: Is war socializing British industry? In his ten days in England, Willkie had talked with hundreds of businessmen-from a dart-playing bricklayer named Albert Phillips to William Edward Rootes, "the British Alfred Sloan," President of The Society of Motor Manufacturers & Traders. He had visited 50 factories (in London. Coventry. Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester, Oldham, Sheffield, Nottingham, etc.). From the evidence so gathered, ex-Businessman Willkie said...
...Individual Scoring Name & Col. 1 2 3 mr-fr Pts Powers, Har. 6 0 0 0 0 30 Wiley, Navy 5 0 0 1 1 28 Potter, Dart. 4 0 0 1 0 22 Parke, Prince. 2 3 0 1 0 21 O'Mara. Dart. 3 0 1 2 0 19 Curwon, Har 3 1 0 0 0 18 Carney, Dart. 3 1 0 0 0 18 McKinley, Col. 1 2 2 0 2 17 Wilhelmy, Dart. 3 0 0 0 1 17 Stowell, Har. 0 5 1 0 0 16 Bosworth, Har. 2 2 0 0 0 16 Conger...
...battle, that of Salamis (480 B.C.) seems now a great exercise in fustian: there Xerxes, surrounded by his brilliant court, sitting on a throne on a shoulder of Mt. Aegaleus, watched his hopes of world conquest crushed on the crescent of water below, watched the brazen-beaked Athenian triremes dart in and bite the fat bellies of his own oversized craft, 400 little ships crushing twice as many big ones. One of the Athenian seamen that day was a poetic fellow named Aeschylus...