Word: dream
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Grand opera was the dream of this girl from Detroit. Between vocalizings, however, she found it necessary to get a job, and she got one in the office of blithe, clever Editor Wyckoff. She became his stenographer and secretary...
...Club Von Ewizer Liebe Brahms Sapphische Ode Brahms Lied der Braut Schumann Der Erl Konig Shubert Madame Matzenauer Jubilate Deo G. Gabrieli Plorate Flii Israel Carissimi Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence French Folk Song Arr. by Holst Harvard Glee Club Intermission Over The Steppe Gretchanioff On Wings of Dream Arensky In The Silent Night Rachmaninoff Thy Warning is Good Grieg Madame Matzenauer Shoot, False Love Morley O' Jesus, Tender Shepherd, Hear German Folk Song Arr. by Brahms Credo from Mass in A Major Schubert Harvard Glee Club
...Club Von Ewizer Liebe Brahms Sapphische Ode Brahms Lied der Braut Schumann Der Erl Konig Slhuberl Madame Matzenauer Jubilate Deo G. Gabrieli Plorate Flii Israel Carissimi Let All Mortal Fleeh Keep Silence French Folk Song Arr. by Holst Harvard Glee Club Intermission Over The Steppe Gretchaninoff On Wings of Dream Arensky In The Silent Night Rachmaninoff Thy Warning is Good. Grieg Madame Matzenauer Shoot, False Love Morley O Jesus, Tender Shepherd, Hear German Folk Song Arr, by Brahms Credo from Mass in A Major Schubert Harvard Glee Club
...Hoover Plan." Happiest and most eager of the Governors was Maine's Brewster. He carried and soon delivered an authorized message from the President-Elect himself, a message outlining a plan (see col. 3) to help carry out the Hoover dream of "abolishing poverty." It being impossible for the Governors' conference to enforce resolutions or fix programs, the Hoover plan was received with applause only, not acted upon...
...Jealous Moon. Jane Cowl, indisputably among the more decorative of Manhattan's heroines, put herself to the perhaps necessary task of writing a play that would deserve embellishments by her upon the stage. The play was romantically sweet, about Pierrot, Columbine and Scaramouche. A designer of dolls, dreaming in far from Freudian fashion of their unfortunate intrigues, found advices in it for his own and on waking up for the epilogue, promised to be true to Judy. Jane Cowl was Judy and, in the doll-designer's dream, she played the part of Columbine...