Word: m
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...piece entitled Trois Jeunes Filles Nues, which, for the sake of the censor, was translated as "Three Girls From The Folies Bergere." The book, by Yves Mirande, was innocuous enough and the music, by Raoul Moretti, was light and gay and altogether pleasant. In addition, the chief comedian, M. Servatius, turned out to be an exceedingly droll fellow. Not the least of the visitors' charms was their unpretentiousness. The French do not spend much on their musical comedies. It is a relief to sit through an evening without being asked to watch armies of chorus ladies parade past...
...youth are not to object to being confined to prison, for the Dictator assures them that any such punishment will not be inflicted unless he deems it deserved. This is in keeping with the main point of the Decalogue which is that it is absolutely necessary to believe that M. Mussolini is always right. On the whole, the hopeful youths of 1919 seem to have aged rather rapidly...
...division of the Intercollegiate Fencing Association meet at the B. A. A. gymnasium Saturday evening, the weakened Harvard teams gained second places in the foils and epee and will represent the University in these events in the finals at New York next week. Dartmouth's sabre team qualified, while M. I. T. did not place...
Four Crimson men qualified in the individual events. D. I. Modell '30 put up the most brilliant exhibition of the evening when he won eight bouts in the foils and lost only one. His teammate, M. U. Copeland '29, won six and lost three, and will accompany him to New York...
Harvard 7, M. I. T. 2: Modell (H)defeated Harris (MIT), 5-3; Hamilton (MIT), 5-1; Earle (MIT), 5-2. Copeland (H) defeated Hamilton (MIT), 5-2; Earle (MIT), 5-4; Oetinger (H) defeated Earle (MIT), 5-2; Hamilton (MIT), 5-2. Harris (MIT) defeated Copeland (H), 5-2; Oettinger...