Word: edna
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Georgianna Chafe; R. F. Denvis, Miss Julie M. Hurley; J. G. Dunton, Miss Gladys Parsons; D. F. Egan, Miss Margaret Egan; R. W. Fitts, Miss Lucie Doyle; A. M. Garvin, Miss Margaret MacInnis; S. F. Hall, Miss Josephine Payne; E. W. Love, Miss Rosamond Bartlett; W. V. Miller, Miss Edna Holzman; J. H. Millet, Miss Thelma Amazun; L. M. Sibley, Miss Mary Ray more...
Other features are a rolling skating act by the Sterlings; Bill Frawley and Edna Louise in a bright playlet "Seven A. M."; Marie and Mary MacFarland the American Grand Opera Stars; Lane and Hendricks in a skit called "Listen Archie"; and La Dora and Beckman, the pair of white birds, who are better on the wing than when warbling...
...prejudiced mind, there are five poems in the volume so much better than all the rest that they should be printed in red. They are: "On Growing Old", by John Masefield; "the Dawn Wind", by Rudyard Kipling; "The Mocking Fairy", by Walter de la Mare; "The Little "Uavern", by Edna St. Vincent Millany; "The Ploughman", by Karle Wilson Baker. One of these is a pair of second-best; one, a "Fairy laughing softly in the garden", one, a simple little song, both old and new; one, free verse. With half-a-dozen others, they hint what the book a pleasant...
John Rothschild ocC, and Miss Mary E. Switzer of Radcliffe, joint chairmen of the General Arrangements Committee; R. E. Wheeler '22 and Miss Edna Cers, joint chairman of the Reception Committee; Eva Wechsler, chairman of the Publicity Committee; Horace B. Davis ocC., Robert Wormser '22, Secretary of the Organizing Committee; John F. Lewis IG., and Peter B. Ferguson '23 of the Committee on General Arrangements; Theodore Dreier '23, chairman of the Finance Committee; A. N. Moore '23 chairman of the Hospitality Committee...
Considering the difficulties of the situations and the impassioned, high-flown soliloquies which their roles demand the various members of the company sculpt themselves with credit. Miss Frances Anderson, in particular, as Edna Earl, is quite as noble and sugary as one could ask in the role of the fair heroine: and Mr. Sullivan, as St. Elmo, has perfect control of the mannerisms of all true villains...