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...George Jean Nathan - Knopf. Mr. Nathan is a conscientious professional iconoclast. He continues to knock down his favorite idols and to scatter the ruins. His victims range from the more eminent of modern dramatists to the more generally accepted of modern doctrines. His endorsements are few. They include Hauptmann, Flo Ziegfeld, Eugene O'Neill, the younger Guitry, George M. Cohan...
...first fifteen. But were the zeros of "un-classicized critics discounted they would place still higher; Aeschylus, for example, now nineteenth would then stand fourth. The cases of tied popularity are enlightening. Dr. Johnson broke the tape with Krazy Kat; St. Augustine, Lenin, and Douglas Fairbanks were triple-tied: Flo Ziegfeld and Frederic the Great matched; and Geraldine Farrar and Henry Ford mated...
...Joyce did several clever one-legged dances, in which his incapacity did not seem to bother him in the least. Lou and Jean Archer sang, danced, and exhibited several beautiful costumes. Mae and Nore Wilton also sing duets; these two possess excellent and well-harmonized voices. Joe Morris and Flo Campbell in their skit. "The Avi-Ate-Her" kept the house in a continuous uproar. Vernon Stiles. "Our Own American can Tenor," sang a number of classical pieces. He well deserved the voluminous applause that he received. Schutl's Royal Wonderetles, a very original marionette ended the effective program...
Dave Roth contributes a versatile offering of piano playing, singing and dancing. Flo Lewis presents a line of new and catchy songs, and Bob Hall is well received as the "Extemporaneous Chap." Some statue posing by Margaret Stewart and William Downing and the Lazier-Worth Co. in "An Evening at Home" complete the bill...
Among the tunes, the most popular were "Hold Me" and Romantic Blues," sung by Miss Oakland, and "I'd Love to Fall Asleep and Wake Up in My Mammy's Arms," by Flo Burt. Of especial interest to Harvard men is the "Labor Agitator," introduced with fine effect in last year's Pudding show by F. M. Trainer '19, and here sung by John T. Murray...