Word: kissing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...stage has always gone its own way with neither abetment nor protest from across the footlights. The folk of that fanciful world attend quietly to their household duties, recking little of the envious eyes upon them. Lovers do their loving shyly but unaffectedly, make their pretty speeches, kiss their pretty kisses, with no thought of the thousand eyes intruding upon their sentimental privacy. It never occurs to the stage criminal that his audience might, were it so inclined, betray his secret. His trust is as implicit as it is touch- ing. Suppose, for instance, that you, leaping up from your...
...greatest works include, among literally scores of others, a Kiss, which made him famous, a bathrobe which made him notorious, and a meditative caveman who made him immortal. The bathrobe was carved upon the statue of Balzac, hiding the pudgy limbs, revealing the noble head. It caused a furious outcry and was, naturally, rejected. But the conception was quite logical, for Balzac's head was the only distinguished feature of his personal appearance. Therefore, in the statue, the head is the only thing the observer sees. The rest is bathrobe...
...Weist '23, and C. H. Morgan 2nd '24, as Antony and Cleopatra, respectively, will sing "I Forgot to Kiss You Good-Bye". Following this, Weist will sing "Another Sister", with the Pony Ballet (L. F. Holmes '24, A. W. Dole '24, R. E. Stevens '24, A. R. Weed '25, W. W. Wood '24, L. J. Young '23). The entertainment will close with a rendering of the hit of the show "When Nero Played His Fiddle in a Roman Cabaret", by L. F. Holmes '24 and E. S. Pinkham...
...tell you", sung by R. S. Flinn '23;, "When Nero Played His Fiddle", with J. R. West '23, L. F. Holmes '24, and H. S. Pinkham, '25; and the "Dance of the Dumb Waiter", with P. L. Cheney 2S. A. "Looking Backwards". "My Gridironed King", and "I forgot to Kiss you Goodbye" were the outstanding song-hits of the show...
...tradition, anything intellectually respectable or time-tried becomes "old-fashioned" and accordingly hopelessly damned. Every engaged couple do not insist upon having their marriage ceremony performed in the New Jersey surf in non-sinkable diving suits; or even in radio-ized airplanes over New York City where the nuptial kiss may be heard in Niagara Falls. But that anyone should want to do so indicates how far the craze for "liberalism" in its newest sense extends...