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Word: screen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Crimson was ahead for just 18 seconds of the game between Captain Dave Key's neat screen shot at 0:47 of the opening period and Jim Fitzgerald's slap-in at 1:05. Before the end of the period the competent BC team had a 4 to 1 lead, and it never let the margin be narrowed...

Author: By Charles W. Bailey, | Title: BC Tops Hockey Team, 9-4 | 12/16/1948 | See Source »

Signing of the veteran stage and screen star was completed in New York yesterday afternoon by Robert E. Miller '48, HDC president, and Peter Davis-Dibblo '48, business manager. Woolley will open in a limited ten-day engagement starting February 24 at the Rindge Tech Theater...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Monty Woolley Will 'Come To Dinner' in HDC Play | 12/14/1948 | See Source »

This week Rank's Religious Films Ltd. unveiled a new production called Belshazzar's Feast, and a new star - the Rt. Rev. Christopher Maude Chavasse, bishop of Rochester. The film opens with a shot of the bishop preaching. As the sermon unfolds, screen stills dramatize the story -from the feast, through the handwriting on the wall, to Daniel's denunciation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Shot in the Arm | 12/6/1948 | See Source »

Maybe MGM was only fooling, and really trying to prove that super-swashbuckling is a superb form of screen humor. And yet there are some dreadful little moments, when the actors suddenly become deadpan, straining to get a dull point across. But these scenes are few, and fairly short. When they intrude, just think back a piece and remember D'Artagnan as he points his poinard to the sky and shouts "All for one!" and his comrades raise their rapiers and reply...

Author: By Donald Carswell, | Title: The Three Musketeers | 12/2/1948 | See Source »

...Gotta Stay Happy (Rampart; Universal-International) is a harmless and mildly entertaining little movie-unless it is butterfly-broken on the wheel of Social Significance. * It has lost none of its gloss in translation from a slick-magazine serial to the screen. Smoothly mounted, directed and acted, it is a pat little story about a painfully earnest flyer (James Stewart) who is running his small-time airline straight into bankruptcy. Then he takes aboard a runaway millionheiress (Joan Fontaine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Nov. 22, 1948 | 11/22/1948 | See Source »

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