Word: kay
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...RECORDS: Hazy and Blue,: a nice job on the Templeton tune by Kay Kyser. Song itself sounds like the concert jazz that was the range in the middle thirties... "Perfidia" by Nana Rodrigo is listed as a bolero, but that's about as far as the boleroness of the thing goes. Sounds vaguely like a foxtrot that was told to go South American, met a rhumba on the way and gave up in the middle... Tiger Rag"--this tune has been torn apart for so many years by so many bands, that any version is apt to sound trite...
...James R. Mellman Yolande Romsey, Boston University Albert W. Merck Deborah Law, Boston Norman Meyer Judith Marsh, Wellesley James N. Miller Margaret Forsythe, Wellesley Maynard M. Miller Audrey Leighton, Wellesley Hills Richard G. Mintz Rosanne Saftil, Brookline Samuel J. Mixter Vallory Willis, New York Robert M. Moore, Jr. Kay Morley, Wellesley William S. Moore, Jr. Mary Blackwell, Farmington Berkeley D. More Sue Hoover, Wellesley Charles H. Morin Billie Loftus, Miss Wheelock's Clarendon Mower, Jr. Mary Anderson, Bradford Junior College James A. Murphy, Jr. Helen Eggart, Radcliffe Howard T. Oedel Carolyn Townsend, Walnut Hill School Harry O'Hare Pauline Callahan...
...Meet Again (Warner) is a re-titling of a remake of One Way Passage, Warner's 1932 tear jerker, in which Kay Francis was an ailing beauty whose serious heart condition was aggravated by a first-glance passion for an escaped murderer (William Powell). This time the tragedy of hapless love is played out against the heartless magnificence of a trans-Pacific luxury liner every throb of whose propeller carries George Brent nearer death by hanging, Merle Oberon nearer death from angina pectoris. Cinemactress Oberon spends much of her allotted time philosophizing about eternity. When not listening, George Brent...
Freedom of speech will not be the point under argument, as was the case in the proceedings of Mrs. Jean Kay against City College of New York, when the latter based an unsuccessful defense of its Russell appointment on the assertion that Russell should be permitted to expound his moral views from a lecture platform...
Gloria does not like publicity though, especially of the "yellow journalism" variety. She reports that all sorts of stories have been started about her and her family, varying from surnames of "publicity hunters" to a recent rumor that Mrs. Kay is trying to get her well-built, brunette daughter a screen contract, which the latter calls just "silly." Letters from all parts of the country flock in to this young lady, approving or disapproving of her mother's action, or just plain asking for a date. But Gloria and her family remain steadfast in their opinions, and are thankful that...