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Usage:

...loyal German adaptation, dubbed in English, of the 1940 bestseller in which Franz (The Song of Bernadette) Werfel proposed a parable of modern man's fatal confusion, as he saw it, of the material and the spiritual worlds. The heroine is a dim-witted old peasant woman (Annie Rosar), who works as a cook in a wealthy Austrian family, saves all her pennies to educate her nephew (Kurt Meisel) for the priesthood. Actually the cook does not care a fig for the nephew. All she wants is a priest who will pray for her soul and make sure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, may 11, 1959 | 5/11/1959 | See Source »

...Buddy Rosar was the envy of every catcher in the big leagues. Substituting as first-string backstop for the world-champion New York Yankees while Bill Dickey nursed a bad shoulder, Rosar was behind baseball's No. 1 plate-with $5,000 of World Series swag practically in his mitt. But Buddy, a law-abiding boy, had always wanted to be a cop in Buffalo, N.Y., his hometown. Last fortnight, on the eve of a doubleheader with the Chicago White Sox, Buddy Rosar shuffled off to Buffalo, where he took examinations for the police force (and where, also...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Buddy Gets Protection | 8/3/1942 | See Source »

When he rejoined his teammates three days later-all smiles and handing out cigars to celebrate the birth of a little Rosar-Catcher Rosar found that a potential policeman's lot was not a happy one. Manager McCarthy had not only fined him $250 for jumping the club but had hired rollicking Rollie Hemsley to take his place. Hemsley, recently cast off by the Cincinnati Reds for his dismal record of 13 hits in 115 times at bat this season, seemed an unlikely squat-in for Bill Dickey. But on his first day with the Yankees, catching all innings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Buddy Gets Protection | 8/3/1942 | See Source »

...program will be as follows: 1. March, "Stars and Stripes Forever," Sousa 2. Overture, "Raymond," Thomas 3. "The Rosar," Nevin (R. H. Anderson '14, trumpet). 4. March, "Up the Street," Morse 5. "Le Cor," Flegier (K. Hadden '14, baritone). 6. Selection, "Faust," Gounod 7. March, "Harvardiana," S. B. Steele '11 8. Waltz, "Estudiantina," Waldteufel 9. "Die belden Grenadiere," Schumann (K. Hadden '14, baritone). 10. Selections, "Count of Luxemburg," Lehar (By request). 11. "Fair Harvard," Gilman

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNION POP-NIGHT MONDAY | 3/9/1912 | See Source »

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