Word: fair
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Seiniger '13) 7. Parade of the Wooden Soldiers Jessel 8. Ride of the Valkyries Wagner Football Songs by Harvard Freshman Glee Club 9. Ballet Suite, "Nutcracker" Tschaikovsky (a) Overture Miniature (b) Dance Chinois (c) Trepak (Russian Dance) 10. Waltz, "Jolly Fellows" Vollstedt 11. Entrance of the Gladiators" -Fucik "Fair Harvard...
Here is the full measure of revenge! Sir Oliver forces his young brother to work as a slave in the galleys, and sells fair Rosamund as a slave in the open market, only to buy her himself after fierce bargaining with the pasha. He nearly loses favor by this act, but equips another galley and takes to the sea. By chance he comes upon an English vessel sent to rescue Rosamund and in charge of the dry and bitter (but just) Sir Henry Goade. By this time Sir Oliver is beginning to feel the emptiness of vengeance. He saves...
...Fairs had a happy home till Mrs. Fair became a war-heroine. Then Mrs. Fair decided that woman's place was on the lecture platform and departed on a $30,000 tour of the country, leaving Husband to be consoled by a distressingly vivacious widow, Son to marry a poor but virtuous hello-girl, and Daughter to fall into the clutches of nicotine, complexion-clay and her mother's manager. But everything came out happily at last. The cast is pretty adequate, though not exciting-the direction and detail good...
...backward to be honest. In spite of the unanimous condemnation of Abie's Irish Rose and So This Is London by the cult of young critics, these plays are running merrily on to a full year of performances. In spite of the efforts of The Dial and Vanity Fair aesthetes to " put over " T. S. Eliot as the greatest modern American poet, his vogue is vanishing amid an incessant attack and counterblast of the younger literati themselves. The authors of The Forty-Niners (recent dramatic fiasco) eat lunch four times a week with the young critics, but they...
...believers in the " great critical conspiracy" want to know just what the younger critics think of one another let them consult the files of Vanity Fair and The Bookman for April, May and June, 1922. Or, better yet, the Bookman's Day Book, written every Sunday by Burton Rascoe of The New York Tribune...