Word: goldens
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...beer, and even now held in tolerable regard by all lovers of prime lager. Several weeks ago this gentleman's janitor approached him and asked with prayerful incredulity if it were true that the larger breweries in this same middle-western city were installing new brewing machinery against the golden day when once again the workers of the land might seek and find solace in the foamy, varnish-colored beverage. Our acquaintance assured him that there was at least a modicum of truth in the report, and his janitor sighed deeply and departed...
...young man told her she was pneumatic. There was no pain, no disease, no old age, little thought. The words, "mother," "baby," "home," were gross obscenities, made so by Our Ford (who sometimes called himself Our Freud). Motto of the World State was Community, Identity, Stability; the Golden Rule was: "Everyone Belongs to Everyone Else." Wisdom came straight from the horse's mouth . . . straight from the mouth of Ford himself: "Ford's in his flivver. All's well with the world." When you were out of sorts you got drunk on a soma tablet; if you were...
Giving its second concert of the season, the Seventeenth Century Ensemble plays tonight in the Great Hall of the Germanic Museum. The members of the Ensemble are Dorothy Brewster Comstock, first violin; Anna Golden, viola; Robert Gundersen, second violin; Jacobus Langendoen, violoncello; and George Madsen, flute. The program is as follows...
...minute. She does not. Swaying dangerously along its erotic tightrope, the play manages to keep Miss Teasdale pure enough until the ultimate chaste gold band is securely around her long third finger. Savage Rhythm. Nowadays it is hard to tell what the once happy-go-lucky Producer John Golden is going to serve up next. The scene of his latest presentation is laid in the Mississippi swamps, where Playwrights Harry Hamilton and Norman Foster would have you believe voodooism is still rife. Savage Rhythm has to do with a black girl named Miss Orchid, who has come home from...
...Bank of New York whose company had handled $1,071,955,000 worth of foreign loans in the last decade. Aggressively Mr. Mitchell argued that these advances were good and useful because they stimulated U. S. foreign trade. German economy, he declared, was "the goose that is laying the golden egg." Asked Senator Gore: "Yes, but who gets the yellow of that...