Word: furst
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Goose-stepping Nazis have long marched smartly to the brassy, thumpy music of the Badenweiler march. No. 256 in the catechism of German Army marches, it was composed on the battlefield in 1914 by Bandmaster Georg Furst of Adolf Hitler's Bavarian Regiment. Herr Hitler first heard it at the Munich Hofbrauhaus, whose themesong it was. Bawled out by leather-lunged Bavarians while beer mugs banged the tables, the Badenweiler soon became a favorite of Fiihrer Hitler.* Later as a prop for such doggerel...
...eleven. He has not run this spring. If Mrs. Mars fails to win the Derby with Reaping Reward or one of the four other horses she has nominated for it. she may still have the satisfaction of keeping the prize in the family. Her daughter Mrs. William H. Furst has an entrant, Gerald, of whom turf opinion is indicated by his odds...
...might have been patterned after Director Erich Von Stroheim. In appearance Von Furst and Von Stroheim are identical, for Von Stroheim plays the role, with obvious relish. Before assuring his actors that they are addle-headed and incompetent, he removes his checked coat, folds it carefully and throws it on the ground. He twists his leading lady's wrists when he suspects her of liking one of his stunt flyers and then rubs corrosive acid on the control wires of that pilot's plane. At this point, the esprit de corps of the stunt flyers*?three pilots who belonged...
Benson, A. B. Braggiotti '34, F. P. Campana '33, G. J. Cassedy '33, G. T. Clapp '34, S. H. Foster '32, W. H. Furst '34, Roger Gleason '32, C. M. Kirkland '34, E. A. Mays '32, J. P. McCaffrey '33, W. C. Owens '33, E. D. W. Sprague '32, M. B. Stone '34, W. R. Sutcliffe '34, C. Q. Thorndike '33, John Ware, Jr. '34, R. P. Waters '34, S. H. Wolcott...