Word: hustler
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That night the Dawes baggage was hustled aboard a train for Scotland. Next morning the Ambassador was gazing happily at heaths and highlands. Well-primed, Hustler Dawes quoted Macbeth at the newsmen...
...following editorial appeared in the Vanderbilt Hustler for November...
...Southern men, yet the entire university population was eager to make the stay of the Vanderbilt warriors a pleasant one. No one can appreciate hospitality more than a Southern gentleman and a college student prizes it above all men. To the student body and faculty of Harvard, the Hustler wishes to extend its thanks for their courteous treatment of the Commodores. Nothing could have given more inspiration to a football player to fight for the South than the presentation of a loving cup by the Cotton Belt States Club of Harvard. While these men were Harvard men and loyal...
After the barbaric war dance of the opening chorus, the first hit was made by W. G. Means '06, as "Bang Bang", who sustained spirited comic action in both his songs and lines, although his voice failed at times to carry. S. D. Preston '06, is "Hustler, the Wanderer", sang "New York's the Place" and "When I Started Out" with engaging ease and jauntiness of manner, and showed considerable range in "Let's Sew" and "Back, get Back", in Act II. On several occasions the orchestra was a little too loud for the voices of the principals...
...Hustler, the Wanderer, S. D. Preston '06Bang Bang, the Sultan of Morocco, W. G. Means '06Guiko, the Jester, R. M. Poor '06J. South West, an Englishman, H. D. Chandler '06Captain Knott, U. S. Navy, A. M. Harlow '07Ras El Nianar, the Prophet, J. J. Rowe '07Slave, A. G. Grant '07Ab Dar Rhamam, head of the Army, H. W. Nichols '07Sally, an English girl, B. L. Young '07Fanchetta, H. B. Sawyer '06Blue Wagtail Birds, R. S. Townsend '07 E. J. Fraser-Campbell '06Quartet, Murderers, Populace, Sailors, Coons, Harem