Word: joel
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Order of placing beginning with the fifth spot was: James J. Sullivan, Jr. '47 who polled 498, Francis D. Fisher '47, Ray, A. Goldberg '48, Joel Rethschild '47, Raymond J. Considine '48, and Leo Martinuzzi...
Facing the undergraduates on the election ballot at noon on Thursday will be: Richard G. Axt '46, Douglas Cater '46, Raymond Considine '48, Eugene A. Dinet, Jr. '44, Francis D. Fisher '47, Ray A. Goldberg '48, Leo S. Martinuzzi, Jr. '50, Joel A. Rotschild '47, James J. Sullivan '47, and Clifford R. Wharton, Jr. '47. Students will vote for three of the 10 nominees...
...already classic love scenes, some will find them highly instructive, while other will just be overpowered. But nobody will deny that, with the exception of the Joel McCrra-Jean Arthur neeking in "The More the Merrier" a few years back, they are the best of their kind ever filmed. In addition, the first, biggest, and meatiest of these shows dramatic technique at its best, for, its local pictorial merits to the side, it is also an indispensable and cleverly contrived part of the plot's development...
...While playing fast & loose with the well-known personalities of Brer Fox & friends, the animators have kept a faint flavor of the old Frost-Conde-Verbeck illustrations. Perhaps Brer Rabbit's happy romps in the Briar Patch do not look quite as gay and wonderful in 1946 as Joel...
...week, with appropriate Hollywood razzle-dazzle, in Atlanta, the only city Uncle Remus himself really knew. The movie's success in the South, which unabashedly dotes on the good old days, is already assured. The film critic of the Atlanta Journal (the rival Constitution's onetime editor: Joel Chandler Harris) went on a special junket to Hollywood for a preview. He has pronounced the picture fully as great-if not anywhere near so long-winded-as that other Atlanta-premiered movie, Gone With the Wind: "There can be no higher praise of any artist's product than...