Word: revealers
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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LIKE John Gilbert. Charles Farrell, when the talkies came, failed to reveal a voice that matched the before vigor be displayed in winning silent becomes. When be made Seventh Heaven which Janet Caynor be become the darling of a million ladies. They wanted cuteness in love, they found in for a long time in Charbe Parrell and Janet Gaynor. Then Charlie did a talking picture version of Libom in a role that called for the bluff and tender in a man. His voice was too thin and without nuance...
...story remained the scripture on which the week's exegesis was built. It was written by bespectacled Lauren D. ("Deac") Lyman, who as the Times' aviation editor befriended obscure young Aviator Lindbergh before his flight to Paris in 1927. Throughout the week Reporter Lyman stoutly refused to reveal the source of his scoop. But Colonel Lindbergh's hatred of certain sensational newspapers, and his corresponding affection for the courteous Times, have long been well-known. Therefore Newshawk Lyman's statements could reasonably be accepted as authentic, possibly firsthand...
...Hearst hates the New Deal, slapped a two-column editorial on the front page of his New York Post under the headline: HOW HEARST HELPED DRIVE THE LINDBERGHS INTO EXILE. Quoting part of Mr. Hearst's message to Reuters, the editorial proceeded as follows: "What Hearst Did Not Reveal...
After thus dragging in and blaming the U. S. in part for The Deal, Mr. Baldwin closed his address by refusing to reveal The Deal's terms, though they came out three days later (see col. 1). Piously observed the Prime Minister, "I have seldom spoken with greater regret, for my lips are not yet unsealed, but were these troubles over I would make a case and I would guarantee that no man would go into the lobby against...
...anybody, ought to know all the mute, inglorious young Miltons, male and female, who are strictly meditating the thankless Muse in college dormitories throughout the land. Her car is attuned to the squawking as well as the melody of the collegiate lyres on the campus. This book reveals both her knowledge and her sympathy. All the contributors are college men and women, but their interests, beyond that single tie of unity, are diverse. Some reveal their slavish adherence to a path which they have not enriched by plundering for old measures and pedantic allusions; others have stolen in order...