Word: gunther
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...noon the Pope ate fresh eggs, the gift of Trappist monks," John Gunther, Rome correspondent, hastened to radio to the Chicago Daily News on Holy Saturday (day before Easter Sunday). His evidence was warning to Roman Catholics that Pope Pius XI was a man, no god. They must not, as the ignorant among them are prone to do in their mystic exaltations during Holy Week, imagine Achille Ambrogio Damiano Ratti other than a onetime boy in Milan, onetime Papal Nuncio to Poland, onetime cardinal, now the 260th successor to St. Peter as head of their Church. They are no Egyptians...
...Richard Wagner's Gotterdammerung, stupendous finale of the Nibelungen Ring, fifth of the Wagner matinees. Nanny Larsen-Todsen, recovering from an illness, sang the difficlut music of Brünnhilde, creditably. Michael Bohmen, big bass also billed as "indisposed," was sinister, impressive, magnificent; Friedrich Schorr, superb as Gunther; Rudolph Laubenthal, bountifully bewigged, an uninspired Siegfried. Critics reveled in the music, lauded its interpreter, Conductor Artur Bodansky; bewailed the fact that carelessness and a disregard for Wagner's instructions were allowed to spoil many of the effects; prayed that the Metropolitan orchestra, for several weeks now noticeably ragged, would...
...tribute to Professor Hans Carl Gunther von Jagemann, Professor of Germanic Philology, whose resignation from the Faculty was recently announced Professor William G. Howard '91, chairman of the German Department, spoke of Professor von Jagemann as one man whose teaching has long had a wide and helpful influence on a very large number of students all over the country. He told of how Professor von Jagemann's resignation brings to a close a period of 36 years of teaching at the University, during which time he has given his energy largely to the instruction of the more advanced courses...
...resignation of Professor Hans Carl Gunther von Jagemann brings to an end with the current academic year an active teacher's career of 41 years, of which 36 will have been spent in the service of Harvard University. Throughout this period Dr. von Jagemann has devoted himself especially to Germanic Philology, and though at the beginning of his sojourn among us he did no little work in the German language and literature, he has of late given no courses which undergraduates are usually prepared to take. Upon graduate students, on the other hand, he has exerted strong influence, not merely...
...resignation, effective next fall, of Professor Hans Carl Gunther von Jagemann, Professor of Germanic Philology at the University since 1898, was announced yesterday. Dr. von Jagemann will become Professor Emeritus...