Word: sufferer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...more. The light, appealing voice seemed better controlled. The Caro Nome with its trills and top was expertly sung. The acting had some meaning. When newsmen asked Marion Talley to explain the change she answered: "Madame Schumann-Heink used to tell me I needed to live and to suffer. Well, maybe I have. That was seven years...
...Varsity A racquetmen, who are now holding fourth place in their league, will still be handicapped by the loss of Robert Grant '34, and Sebert E. Davenport, III '34, who have been unable to compete all this season. In addition, the team will suffer from the absence of George H. Hartford '34, and E. Roten Sargent '36, who have not yet returned from vacation...
Most persons who have gone through this experience suffer the rest of their lives from anemia and general weakness; even mental weaknesses have been reported, I have since learned. The Methylene Blue restores the red corpuscles which the poison breaks down, but knowledge of this would not have been available to me had not TIME made the announcement. Neither of us have any after-effects from our experience. The physician. Dr. G. Ralph Maxwell, should also be commended for keeping himself abreast of the times in this manner...
...impostors in religion such as pretend to personate Jesus Christ or suffer their followers to worship or pay them divine honors . . . shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.-Chapter 235, section 72, Laws of 1898, New Jersey. This law was cited in a report filed last week in Newark by a three-man committee investigating that inexplicable Negro cultist, Major J. "Father" Divine. The committee was appointed last autumn by Judge Richard Hartshorne as a result of disorderly conduct complaints against a noisy meeting of Father Divine's Newark "Kingdom." Judge Hartshorne took no action last week, left...
...Good Americans (by Sidney J. and Laura West Perelman; Courtney Burr, producer) is a glib notation on the way some U. S. citizens, who live year-round in Paris, drink, wisecrack, pose and suffer. A tall, indolent young writer (Fred Keating) vaguely wishes he could afford to marry a striding, firm-chinned Paris fashion expert with a dazzling smile (Hope Williams). He is reduced to living off commissions from Paris stores to which he steers rich U. S. girls, finally resigns himself to the idea of marrying one. With laconic bitterness Hope Williams counters by encouraging a rich New York...