Word: singed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...spoke of the "Hell of a lot of fun" to be derived from that organization saying that it took very little time, yet traveled much, accomplished great things. John H. Eric '37, secretary of the Glee Club, spoke of the high class music which that organization is accustomed to sing, leaving the cheaper to the Band (by intimation...
Theodore C. Osborne '37, of the instrumental clubs, advertised for other players, accordion players, or players of any other instruments, or, in fact, one man who could sing a quartet or put on any specialty...
...uniformity in manners, so there is no catholicity in taste. If a Denver student dunks his doughnut in his coffee back home he should by all means dive in to his wrist at the Union breakfasts. If one from Pass Christian likes to hang blankets over his fireplace and sing "Empty Saddles" in the shower, all the frowns of an Eastern roommate should not strip his walls or silence his matutinals. He, after all, is the "typical Harvard...
...Music at Harvard," which has been recently employed by Professor Walter R. Spalding as a title for his excellent book, is a phrase which covers a multitudes of virtues as well as not a few sing...
...bounder by pretending to be in love with a penniless college boy, Pete (Gene Raymond), whom she pays to masquerade as an objectionable French count. Sole variation on this time-honored theme is that Pete is also a crooner seeking a job in radio. This gives him opportunity to sing several pleasant new melodies (Cabin on the Hill-tot), Let's Make A Wish, My Heart Wants to Dance...