Word: louise
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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My Fair Lady in CHICAGO, Music Man in SAN FRANCISCO, Two for the Seesaw in ST. Louis, are reasonable facsimiles of the Broadway originals (see above).
Author Turner's most savage anecdotes are from the annals of court medicine. In a day when only God could save a King, a typical court quack was John of Gaddesden (probably Chaucer's "verrey parfit practisour"). John went so far as to publish a list of ailments...
Dean Monro and Donald Willard of the Boston Globe will speak to the representatives tonight at a Harvard Union dinner. At a luncheon tomorrow, they will meet Louis Lyons, curator of the Nieman Fellowships, and several of the Nieman Fellows.
Died. Mort Cooper, 45, right-handed pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals (1938-45) who won more than 20 games in the seasons of 1942 (National League Most Valuable Player), 1943 and 1944 pitching to his brother, Catcher Walker Cooper, as the Cardinals won three pennants and two World Series...
Died. Samuel H. Stiefel. 61, white man sometimes known as "The Father of Negro Show Business," who as a bigtime theater operator gave early breaks to such stars as Pearl Bailey. Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and Cab Galloway; of a kidney infection; in Philadelphia.