Word: minore
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...program follows: I. Serenade No. 3 in D Major Mozart Allegro assai, Andante, Minuet, and Trio II. Overture "Fingal's Cave" Mendelssohn III. Rosita Ecalona, Soloist First Movement from the Piano Schumann Concerto in A minor Intermission I. Caresses Pantcho Wladigeroff II. Moods Joseph Akhron III. Serenade and Intermezzo Erick Korngold IV. Humoresque Max Reger V. On Youth Gustav Mahler
...previous series of leaps and bounds.. But any time after his Freshman Year he may secure the additional eighteen required credit hours by taking several of the remaining two dozen of unrelated courses. Each may lead him into a detailed consideration of the lives of the minor bards of a narrowly limited period, although he has never received the background necessary to an intelligent appreciation of them...
...streets to obtain money for medicine by selling herself. Arrested, sentenced to a workhouse, she escapes, finds employment with a traveling circus. And, as any botanist could have predicted, the rose of romance burgeons in the sawdust. In this case, the male principal is Gino (Charles Farrell), who paints minor masterpieces more often than he takes a bath. When Gino takes Angela back to Naples, the police recognize her and clap her into jail. When she is finally released, Gino exhibits a desire to strangle and a passion to wed. Noble, he weds. The warm, misty sky of Naples...
...Jews. Critics have pointed out that a Jewish star on a New York team would pack in thousands of new spectators at every game. And now, on the bright turf in front of them, the people saw a Jew begin his career-Andy Cohen, second baseman, picked from the minor leagues to take the place of the famed Rogers Hornsby. And when Cohen had brought home the first Giant run of the season, had driven in the tying and winning runs with a two bagger against the left-field fence, had had a bat in every Giant rally, fielded quietly...
...writing, and indeed these books lay no claim to the latter title. Written, one by the political authority of the eminent Baltimore Sun, the other by a Princeton professor, both books will be chiefly of lay interest. Both authors are well-informed, authoritive, and unbiased. Scholars will detect occasional minor flaws, but will be impressed with the shrewdness of interpretations given to party platforms, campaign pledges, election results...