Word: earls
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Among the cast Kent Smith stands out as the Earl of Warwick, capturing perfectly that character's businesslike, practical, self-assured--in a word, English--qualities. Michael Wagner as the Dauphin stammered over his "B's" with considerable skill (and historical accuracy) and gave a good impression of weak mindedness. Frederic Tozere contributed a nice stolid manner and sermon-practiced voice as the Archbishop of Rheims. Earle Hyman as the good-natured general Dunois was methodical and colorless at first but picked up personality as he went along; and Ian Keith, Earl Montgomery, and Thayer David portrayed well three different...
...London, Britain's Lord Chamberlain Roger Lumley, Earl of Scarbrough, offi cial censor of public stage plays, slapped a ban on Playwright Miller's latest one-acter, A View from the Bridge. "The play has a theme of incestuous love," ex plained Miller ruefully. "That got by all right, but the censor objected to a scene" in which two men embrace one another." ¶ Wife Marilyn was getting mixed no tices. From her old (69) acquaintance, Poetess Dame Edith Sitwell, with whom La Monroe sipped gin and grapefruit juice, came a highbrow huzza: "She's quite remarkable...
...Conference's closed sessions will take place at 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday and Wednesday in Lamont Forum Room. The first will discuss "General Education in Public and Private Colleges." Participants will include Earl J. McGrath, President of The University of Kansas City and former United States Commissioner of Education; Brian A. McGrath, S. J., Academic Vice President of Georgetown and Robert G. Crosen, Dean of the Faculty at Lafayette College...
Hurrah for TIME! Your July 2 article on Earl Long is a masterpiece. Our governor is the worst thing that ever crawled from the slimy swamp of Louisiana politics...
...made a trip to the scene of the Ribbon Creek tragedy; Sergeant McKeon stood with his judges on the grassy bank, and stared expressionless into the dark water. Back in the steaming auditorium, survivors of Platoon 71 told of the death march. When he first joined Platoon 71, Private Earl Grabowski, 18, had been known as a crybaby; now, with manful calm, he told of the march, sparing neither McKeon, the platoon nor the Marine Corps. Said Grabowski: "We knew that McKeon was serious, that he was trying to teach us discipline." Asked Berman, on crossexamination: "Would you say that...