Word: loves
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Omaha also has a Coliseum and it was here that the 38th King & Queen of Ak-Sar-Ben held their levee in a setting modeled after the Temple of Love at Versailles. Congressman Malcolm Baldrige, as Court Chancellor, addressed the regal train, the State's best and richest young and old folk. King was William Henry Schellberg, 6-ft., silver-haired president of Union Stock Yards Co., done up in the usual Empire court dress complete with cream satin knee-pants. Long a leading figure in Omaha, he is credited with having done much to build...
...love of his neighbor does not prevent the necessary educational severity, much less differences and distances. Fascism rejects universal brotherhood." Economics. "Fascism believes always in sanctity and heroism-that is, in acts in which no economic motive, distant or near, enters. . . . Fascism rejects the conception of economic 'happiness...
...play has few pretensions to distinction. A tempestuous and ardent German danseuse (Miss Ulric) is joined on her U. S. tour by a young Philadelphia millionaire who hides his identity from her, agrees not to make love to her if she will take him on as her piano player. Attired for the most part in revealing negligees, Miss Ulric at one moment tries to seduce him with the familiar Ulric twistings and oglings, at the next moment wards him off with her rasping voice. The struggle ends in a Rocky Mountain blizzard which has marooned the dancer's private...
...Check Girl (Fox) sets out as a fable of true love in Manhattan between a hat check girl (Sally Eilers) and a millionaire's son (Ben Lyon). Finding this theme thin as well as improbable, it pads itself out with winter sports scenes, night club shows, the slimy trail of a blackmailing scandal-sheet editor, underworld ramifications, subway interludes. The unreality of the proceedings is heightened by the two leading players' conflicting ideas of what the picture is about. Ben Lyon tries ably to play it as light comedy. Sally Eilers, stiff and strained, registering emotion by twisting...
Further, they are filled with a strong nationalism, not the nationalism of an old and settled empire, but nationalism as a Pole or an Irishman understands it--a love of independence that sweeps away all other considerations. They have a culture and a civilization of their own and they will never be content under the dominion of the United States...