Word: greenes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Seniors and Juniors have been aiding Coach Dick Harlow in the preliminary session this week with the Freshmen. George Klein, Joe Nee, Captain-elect Bob Green, Chief Boston, and Cliff Wilson were on hand yesterday to assist the Varsity mentors...
...Green worked with the regular end and kicking coach, Wes Fesler, on some ten Yardling ends, while Klein and Nee, starting guards against Yale last fall, drilled the guards under the supervision of Lyall Clark, new head line coach...
...cast of Pins & Needles moved on to Washington's Mayflower Hotel to perform before Madam Secretary Perkins and 1,000 others, in honor of the 25th anniversary of the Department of Labor. At the Mayflower the show went over big a second time. In the audience was William Green, President of the A. F. of L.; conspicuously absent was John L. Lewis, who is at outs with I. L. G. W. U.'s Dubinsky. During the song One Big Union for Two, which is propaganda for the C. I. O., Green stole the spotlight from the actors, remained...
Negro Actor Ingram, not to be confused with Director Rex Ingram (Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse) has been on & off stage and screen for almost 20 years, played by far his greatest role as de Lawd in the cinema version of Green Pastures. Forty-two, 6 ft. 2 in. tall, 225 lb., he owes most of the vigor of his acting to the vigor of his physique and personality. A medical student as well as an actor, he confesses to finding his career greatly hampered because of his race, dramatizes his position by suddenly placing his dark-brown hand...
...Chamberlain, H. L. Mencken, Van Wyck Brooks, as a rule its 21,000 readers could expect: ten or twelve pages of reviews each week; a yes & no editorial about the book clubs, best sellers, proletarian novels, modern poetry or some current literary subject; Christopher Morley's The Bowling Green, in which the author ranged from his enthusiasm for Chaucer and Conan Doyle to accounts of his lecture tours; another column called Trade Winds, marked by the same weary whimsicality, in which a character called old Quercus, or young Quercus, or just young Q, commented on everything from misprints...