Word: seene
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...picture you ran of the Vice President and his daughter at the baseball game [June 10] is good for millions of votes. I don't know when I have seen a more delightful shot...
Morawice has become a new village since that day. Neighbors speak to each other again, freely participate in village affairs. Production is up. Where only five cows grazed eight months ago, 35 may be seen. Because there are no forced milk deliveries, the farmers are producing as many calves as they can, and every yard of arable land is heavily planted. Said an old peasant: "Today if we waste land, it is money out of our own pockets." The geese and hogs that waddle across Mora-wice's bumpy main street are 100% capitalist-owned...
Boston is historical in other ways; and it is best seen by walking. If you start at Copley Square and walk north, you will come eventually to the docks, and can cross the Charles, if you like, to Charlestown and to Chelsea. On the way, the Public Gardens come first, and are somewhat bleak now and lack the swan boats, but there is, still, a picture-taking man with his venerable camera. Higher up, on Tremont Street and nearer the State Capitol, an old man used to sell catnip. He kept his stand next to the Old Granary Burial Ground...
...Baroque-styled drama (as distinguished from his Renaissance plays like Romeo and Richard II, and from his Mannerist plays like Hamlet and Lear). It gives us now another superlative--the production of Shakespeare's masterpiece that has inaugurated the third season of the American Shakespeare Festival Theatre. I have seen some seven or eight Othello productions over the years, and this far surpasses all the others...
...Cooke deVaron led her carefully trained New England Conservatory Chorus in pieces dating from 1612 to the present. The unpredictable Charles Ives was represented by his strangely polytonal "Sixty - seventh Psalm;" Randall Thompson '20, Rosen Profesor of Music, by "Alleluia," his best piece; Irving Fine '37, by "Have You Seen the White Lily Grow?"; Carl McKinley '17, by a portion of his dramatic legend The Kid, which incorporated American cowboy song material and is scored for piano and percussion; and Mabel Daniels by her rousing "Psalm of Praise" with piano, three trumpets and timpani, composed last year for the 75th...