Word: haviland
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...first World War, when men inhaled birch beer like coke and the biggest blood-suckers were only leeches. James Cagney in his usual punching self demonstrated that the world is his with two fists and a correspondence course in dentistry. He picked up an alluring nurse--Olivia de Haviland, in a swell park scene, but doesn't like her. Instead the cockney Irishman chases exciting Rita Hayworth, the strawberry blonde, and isn't fast enough to land her. But you knew he would marry Olivia and become a dentist. Black-mailed and jugged by a former friend, Cagney gets...
...slow show saved by some top-rung acting. Oliva de Haviland proffers a pleasing new approach, abandoning Melanie's sweet-souled idealism for a rougher characterization. Alan Hale as a street-cleaner and wife-wolfer is huge and gives the customers a few hearty giggles. Cagney's successful plodding is beautifully contrasted against the strawberry blonde's hypocritical and disastrous social climbing...
...annual meeting of the HARVARD CRIMSON was hold yesterday afternoon when the 1941 executive board relinquished their posts to the offices of the 1942 board. The officers retiring include President Spencer Klaw, Managing Editor Alfred J. Gilbert, Advertising Manager H. Field Haviland, Jr., Business Manager Henry Doerr III, Editorial Chairman Richard D. Edwards, Executive Editor William W. Tyng, Photographic Editor John C. Cobb 2nd, Sports Editor D. Donald Peddie, and Circulation Manager Julian M. Sobin...
William A. Atchley '43, Englewood; Thorwill Brehmer '42, Montclair; Donald A. Brew '41, East Orange; Robert S. Frankel '43, East Orange; Henry F. Haviland, Jr. '41, East Orange; Preston T. Roberts, Jr. '43, Moorestown; and John J. Sopka '42, Elizabeth...
...directly affected was the Limoges (Haviland) porcelain works in central France, world-famed for delicate, artistic craftsmanship. Germany might keep that alive in hope of recovering U. S. markets, but at the moment, with France worrying more about food itself than the dishes it was served on, Limoges porcelain had already gone...