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...twins are the result of an imperfect splitting of the egg during gestation. The resultant monstrous births may be two complete individuals like Chang and Eng, joined at a single point. Or "they" may be a single individual equipped with an extra (generally useless) arm, leg, head or other organ...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Son & Nephew | 2/5/1951 | See Source »

Outstanding are Thayer David as the myopic Monsieur Organ, Priscilla Morrill as the spunky maid, and Paul Ballantyne as an Enlightened bourgeois. Jan Farran is a tempting Madam Organ, and Jerry Kilty is, just as he should be, incredibly impetuous as Monsieur Organ's son. Kilty parodies--with the utmost skill--Baroque music and Baroque graces in a lyric which he has written for Louis XIV, who, by the way, is seated in the Brattle Royal Box. And then there is Fred Gwynne who during the Prologue wanders in briefly as a most foppish of fops...

Author: By Thomas C. Wheeler, | Title: Sam Jaffe in the Brattle Theatre's 'TARTUFFE' | 1/27/1951 | See Source »

...reason why other journalists praise and envy the Post is that in the past 17 years it has risen from the unenvied position as Washington's No. 1 scandal sheet to become the most independent and vigorous paper in the capital. Harry Truman regards it as an opposition organ; the capital's reactionaries have long called it the "Washington edition of the Daily Worker." Yet its news judgment is so sure, its editorial voice so forthright, that, in a city where all lawmakers and administrators reach for the New York papers, it has become must reading...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: House That Butch Built | 1/1/1951 | See Source »

Most church architecture in the U.S., writes Journalist Georges Fradier, "may evoke an English cathedral, a Corinthian temple or a bathhouse, but the interior is always the same: that of a third-rate movie palace . . . Varnished benches present a comfortable resting place for faithful buttocks. A drawing-room organ emits sugared water. A pulpit . . . two or three pots of flowers, that is all the decoration. Some temples retain an altar, but this outmoded object serves only to support a still larger number of flower pots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Flowers & Sugared Water | 12/18/1950 | See Source »

...your editorial of November 22, entitled, "Divided We Stand," the CRIMSON showed several blatant misconceptions and unfamiliarity with the facts. As the official news organ of Harvard College, we believe you and your readers would like to hear the Inter-House Social Affairs Committee side of the story. We have set forth the following points in an endeavor to clear up the situation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dance Chairmen Disagree | 11/29/1950 | See Source »

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