Word: kenyon
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Steel (Milton Sills-Doris Kenyon). The pictorial possibilities of the steel mills are boldly seized upon by this endeavor and frittered away on a silly story. Mr. Sills plays a worker who assumes the blame for a murder, committed by the girl he loves. He escapes to the East and takes up his trade in other mills. The story follows him. The blistering scenery of steel manufacture surrounds the slothful narrative impressively. Perhaps the story might be eliminated and the remains be used for a two-reel educational...
Meanwhile Senator Norris, insurgent Nebraskan, contemplates again the worthwhileness of political life, the betrayals, the corruption, the callow honors. He recalls the "treason" his Progressive friends played him some years ago when they backed the Kenyon packer bill instead of his own packer bill. That day he collapsed in the Senate. Since, he has remained inexcitable over the rehashed chatter, begun by Mr. LaFollette in 1924, to give U. S. politics another Progressive orientation. Feeling that most of the institutions they are combating are as firmly embedded as ever, he now, as in 1924, turns toward the recourse of soft...
...complete revised cast follows. Tom Brown G. B. Bingham '28 Gerald Thorne K. A. Perry '28 Wilfred Kenyon S. B. McGavaran '28 Claxon Madden D. W. Moreland '28 John Cartwright S. S. Korzeiuk '29 Tubby Anderson H. L. Kozol '27 Happy Thurston R. C. Darling '29 Barnard Edward Morley '29 Coyne F. H. Rahr '29 Ellis R. B. Gowing '29 Reynolds R. J. Bove '29 Bud Hall G. G. Ackerson '27 Codrington C. D. Gowing '28 Old Clothes Man Edward Welton '26 O'Hara Burke Rivers '29 First Crew Man Mark Winkler '28 Second Crew Man R. W. Burgevin...
...Milton Sills looks like, wait patiently at this one and you can find out. He strolls in very late as that fabulous creature, an ascetic Italian duke. But his arrival does little to help the piece, which is melo-amorous studio stuff and none too clever at that. Doris Kenyon is present as a somewhat simpering U. S. jazzabel out on an ultimately successful coronet hunt. The header (out of a window) that wicked Count Stelio (Charles Beyer) takes is alleged actually to have dislocated the actor's neck...
Worthy of contemplation by U. S. students who must this month decide what courses of study they shall undertake during the coming school year, were words of Sir Frederic G. Kenyon, written for a conservative London quarterly and relayed to the U. S. last week by the discerning Living...