Word: finnish
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...most important place in Finland last week was not Helsingfors (Helsinki), the capital; not the seaports of Vasa (Vaasa) or Viborg (Viipuri), but the farming village of Lapua. The Finns who speak Finnish and the Finns who speak Swedish all spoke of Lapua last week, as did all of Finland's 624 newspapers and magazines. Acute observers saw emerging from Lapua a minor Mussolini, possible Dictator of the country, by the name of Vihtori Kosola...
...Symphony Orchestra will be at the Pops Concert of May 19. Jerusalem Parry Marching Brahms Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring Bach May No Rash Intruder Handel Choruses from Ruddigore Sullivan Three Welsh Folk Songs The Monks March O, Why Camest Thou Before Me Men of Harlech Summer Evening Finnish Folk Song Fireflies Russian Folk Song Galway Piper Irish Folk Song Drake's Drum Coleridge-Taylor
...Karl Koski, 30, Finnish carpenter, with a handkerchief over his bald head, clutching his sweater cuffs to keep his hands warm, passing through a brush fire and a field composed largely of Irishmen and other Finns; a national championship marathon (26 mi., 385 yds.), run around Silver Lake on Staten Island...
...with his unique camera hidden beneath a napkin, Editor Bott's "Cyclops" can and does snap the Very Rev. William Ralph Inge, Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral, in the act of sleeping through a speech at an Anglo-Finnish Society dinner. At the English-Speaking Union dinner, the Archbishop of Canterbury was snapshot six times, peering, grimacing, pinching his chin. Timothy A. Smiddy, High Commissioner of the Irish Free State, was seen smacking his lips over what was clearly not his first glass...
...Babel", by Rubinstein; "Marching", by Brahms; "Me Ye Have Bereaved", by Morales; "May No Rash Intruder", from "Solomon", by Handel; and "Drake's Drun", by Coleridge-Taylor. Here an intermission will take place, after which the program will continue with Three Welsh Folk Songs; "Summer Evening", being a Finnish folk song; "The Galway Piper", being an Irish folk song; "Jesu. Joy of Man's Desiring", by Bach; and finally, Chorus from "The Gondoliers", by Sullivan...