Word: stouts
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...none but the most iconoclastic purist. Director Geddes has also provided an adequate cast. Raymond Massey, a cadaverous young man who brings from London fame as an actor-director-manager (The Man in Possession, Topaze, Grand Hotel) simultaneously makes his U. S. and Shakespearean debut in the title role. Stout Colin Keith-Johnston (Journey's End) of the husky voice is Laertes. Friends of Leon Quartermaine who remember his eminently sympathetic treatment of "Uncle" in Journey's End, regretted that he had a part no larger than Horatio...
...Estabrook '34; C. F. Woodard '35; A. S. Pier '35; C. J. Sewall '35; G. H. Bullwinkle 1G; J. S. Hayes '33; J. L. Farley '32; G. L. Wagner '35; E. H. Clark '33; J. E. Rogerson '34; J. J. Ney '35; E. S. Rogs '35; R. A. Stout Sp.; W. L. Post '35; M. F. McKesson '34; S. E. Corcoran '35; G. M. Pike '32. Elapsed time--26 min. 23 3-5 sec. Actual time...
...those cavilling materialists who blot the world, that the Vagabond at one point said the lecture was "today" and at another with equal calm stated that it was to be "tomorrow." He could make adequate rebuttal, but he won't. Did not Keats write of "Stout Cortez?" Are you not answered, oh ye of little faith? And anyway, it is part and parcel of the nuance, the devil may care, the grand elan that makes the Vagabond such a lovable old wastrel. Ask anyone you meet, "What makes the Vagabond such a delightful character?" and the answer will come back...
...Woodrow Wilson made him solicitor to the Department of the Interior. Warren Gamaliel Harding made him attorney to the U. S. Railroad Administration. Then he became director of the I. C. C.'s finance bureau. At Kingfisher College (Okla.), when he was graduated in 1905, he was a stout footballer. A Rhodes scholarship and St. John's College, Oxford, brushed up his rough spots. Last week he was happy to receive the approval of President Hoover, many a politician, many a shipper...
...sportsman's life is inevitably connected with risk. Often it is the risk itself that makes the particular event attractive to stout hearted men. But a true lover of the game is never fool-hardy, he never invites that risk. When mere chance then converts hard play into a fatal injury men pause to praise the play that cost him life and damn the fate that robbed...