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Russell Sage's James Laurence Meader (an exception): "England and France . . . have the right to expect every type of service we are capable of rendering short of sending an expeditionary army. . . . [We must come] to their active assistance at once rather than wait until we find it necessary to fight Hitler and all that he stands for single-handed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Turbulent Times | 10/2/1939 | See Source »

...class: William B. Cavin, Jr. '37 defeated Gosline (A), referee's decision (overtime); 155-pound class: Lorrin E. Woodman '37 defeated Bird (A), referee's decision; 165-pound class: Donald B. Armstrong, Jr. '37 defeated Porter (A), referee's decision (overtime); 175-pound class: Gerard J. Piel '37 defeated Meader (A), referee's decision: Unlimited Class: Fletcher (A) defeated William B. Gresham, Jr., fall, 5.30. Referee: C. R. Huntington. Tim- ers: Whiting, Robertson (A); Frank G. Jewett...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Minor Week-end Sports | 2/19/1934 | See Source »

...herself suggestively and came forth to pipe his pet coloratura aria with comically fluttering eyelids and exaggerated soubrette wiggles. But these things supplied the few bright intervals in this latest of many versions of Die Fledermaus. The plot is the same old one : a rich, stuffy Viennese (Tenor George Meader), sentenced to a week in jail, first takes an evening off, goes to a party where he becomes foolishly involved with his chambermaid (Helen Ford) and his wife (Peggy Wood) whom he ogles without recognizing. The adapters in their effort to oil away the creaks have injected many a laborious...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: New Plays in Manhatten: Oct. 23, 1933 | 10/23/1933 | See Source »

...trite to be really funny seemed funny last week at Manhattan's Metropolitan Opera House. A beggar walked on stage leading a dog with a BLIND sign around its neck and the audience guffawed when it was told that the dog was blind, not the master. Little George Meader caused a big laugh when he appeared made up as the Mad Hatter, tripped over a carpet bag, played a serenade on a red silk umbrella. Tenor Walther Kirchhoff was no funnier than usual but the audience snickered when he came out carrying a sun flower. Occasional exclamations escaped...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Comic Relief | 1/12/1931 | See Source »

TREASURER *James Roosevelt152 John Cross II 70 Arthur Lithgow Devens 64 POET *Douglas Payne Adams 82 Harrison McGowan Parker 77 Theodore Hall, Jr. 60 Robert Meader Easton 34 Frederick William McNear, Jr. 34 IVY ORATOR *Albert Goodwill Churchill 151 Edward Trumbull Eatchelder 142 MARSHALS *Wallace Russell Harper 516 *James Elmer Barrett 229 *Gardner Lothrop Lewis 182 Lawrence Witherapoon Dickey 170 Bernard Barnes 163 Josiah Warren Potter 154 Guy Constant Holbrook, Jr. 144 William, Potter Lage 110 Thomas Frothingham Mason 103 NEW CONSTITUTION In Favor 163 Majority 23 ORATOR Edward M. M. Warburg 107 Robert Hayden Jones 104 Gerald Wallace Harrington...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SENIORS SELECT NINE OFFICERS | 12/5/1929 | See Source »

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