Word: live
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...pilot Harry Hawker, who in 1919 attempted the first transatlantic flight and was picked out of the sea off Newfoundland. Their company, now named H. G. Hawker Engineering Co. Ltd., produces nearly half the planes currently flown by the Royal Air Force. His rich business enabled Builder Sopwith to live in a mansion near Park Lane. After the death of his first wife, a daughter of 8th Baron Ruthven, in 1930 he sold the house to the Crown. (It is now occupied by Princess Mary and her husband, the 6th Earl of Harewood.) Last year he married Phyllis Brodie Gordon...
...gentle andante, jerking his head so violently for climaxes that his glasses kept sliding down his nose. Mr. Clark admires Klemperer so much that he hurried back from Europe for last week's concert, personally introduced the new conductor to the orchestramen, took him into his home to live. Mr. Clark's enthusiasm aroused nearly as much hope in Los Angeles last week as Conductor Klemperer's first performance. It was whispered about that he might change his mind and go on providing, in part at least, for the orchestra he founded and subsidized to the tune...
...soon the sky will clear and shine with a glowing, enchanting blue. The leaves will crackle under foot, and the dying plant life glimmer deceptively gold and crimson in the sun, as with a vernal life and freshness. The tang in the air will stimulate the will to live, when old men will feel young and explain "Indian summer." Then the Vagabond will take to Nature a bottle of sweet wine, and bread and cheese, and her, to make one more memory against the icy death of winter...
...tell about a musician of genius. The Soul Enchanted, of which the Death of a World is the fourth but not last installment, has a woman as hero. (Other volumes: Annette and Sylvie, Summer, If other and Son.) Even if 67-year-old Author Holland should not live to complete his plan, readers will find The Death of a World integral in itself. Annette Riviere and her only son Marc do not join in the rejoicing with which Paris greets the Armistice. Annette's warm heart fears what will happen to Marc in the post-War maelstrom...
...Pyrex beakers over a silver Bunsen burner. But the convivial graduate students who look forward to these wholesome meals have not as yet found the little invitations in the Crimson. This is not because President Conant has not tea in his pantry yet, but because he does not live at 17 Quincy Street. President Conant "will be glad to see all men who are students in the University," when the Cambridge furniture-moving strike is ended, when he will move his worldly goods from his house on Oxford Street...