Word: ranson
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...etre plutot qu'un monstre naissant); une force pas toujours accordee a la tension si forte des lignes alexandrins eux-memes. Mais dans le role de Narcisse, Raymond Gerome a ete merveilleux, une belle anguille, avec un sens si exact de la modulation scenique. Il faut signaler aussi Marcelle Ranson si accomplie dans le role d'Albine, et Claude Martin (Burrhus), qui d'une maniere brusque mais touchante prononce le jugement definitif sur Neron: "Ses yeux indifferents ont deja la constance/D'un tyran dans le crime endurci des l'enfance...
...group disbanded in 1926, and officers of the Summer School expect tomorrow's forum to be something of a reunion. Ranson, Warren and Elliott will attend, along with Robert Lowell and William Alfred...
...average of once a month our Merchandising Director Briscoe ("Beezer") Ranson crates up his exhibits, alerts his truckers and carpenters, and sets out to tell TIME'S story to some major gathering. Different conventions call for different types of exhibits. At one convention of retail clothiers, for example, our exhibit was labeled "Mr. TIME'S Bedroom." It was simply a bedroom containing the precise number of hats (3), shoes (6 pairs), suits (7) and personal effects owned by the average male reader of TIME. The articles displayed were, of course, those of TIME advertisers...
Ghika served his apprenticeship in Paris, soaking up great art in its museums and loud argument in its noisy bistros. He first tried formal study in the city's Academic Ranson, but soon gave it up. Ghika got his own studio, met Picasso, Braque, and Jean Arp, and learned the hard way. At first, he copied the impressionist manner of Renoir, then progressed to Cézanne and Seurat, and finally found what he was looking for in cubism. When Ghika held his first Paris show in 1927, it was a near sellout...
...Ranson believes her memory might have returned without special teaching. But he has no doubt that this greatly speeded the process and, more important, kept her from withdrawing timidly into herself. Carolyn has been back at work, part-time, and she has recalled the names of flowers, though she still has occasional difficulty in bringing out the right name. This week, far from being timidly withdrawn, Choir Singer Carolyn Bigham is going to her church's Bonclarken Conference, just as she hoped to do in the fourth grade...