Word: sullivans
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...summary: HARVARD 1937 B.U. 1937 White, Boning, r.f. r.f., Snedden Moser, Boning, Stephenson, l.f. l.f., Luiz, Murphy Gray, Field, c. c., Sullivan, Skoler, Rabinowitz Gibson, Monroe, Witherspoon, r.g. r.g., Maddocks Mason, Monroe, Lewis, Shuler, l.g. l.g., Nathan...
...which increased rather than alleviated them. Two things, however, stand out. One is the uniform excellence of the sets; the other is the acting of Lois Hall, who literally steals the show and turns in an impressive performance in a difficult part. Louise Graham is very good indeed, Richard Sullivan beams his way through none too convincingly, and Elisabeth Morison apparently cherishes a delusion that she is in the Moscow Art Theatre. The rest of the cast was undistinguished but adequate...
...York Stock Exchange had agreed to underwrite the sale of all shares not subscribed by stockholders. Of the 92,348 shares offered, stockholders subscribed just 277. Last week Redmond & Co. refused to take the 92,071 Peerless shares remaining. Its refusal was based on the opinion of its lawyers (Sullivan & Cromwell) that Peerless Corp. had no charter right to engage in the brewing business, no right to sell stock to finance a wholly owned brewing subsidiary. Promptly Peerless Corp. hired slick little Max D. Steuer to file suit against Redmond & Co. to make it carry out its contract, to collect...
Critics, the sacred geese whose panicky cackling rouses the citadel of plain men against the night attack of some threateningly new idea, are sometimes better than that. In Science, such men as J. W. N. Sullivan (TIME, Sept. 5, 1932; Oct. 23), in Art and Literature, Julius Meier-Graefe, are not so much sentries as interpreters. Bilingual, they can read the barbaric ensigns of these seeming foreigners and translate them into symbols that will not frighten the commonest sense. Interpreter Meier-Graefe's biography of crazy Painter van Gogh is known already to a few U. S. readers...
...Mark Sullivan and other panting contemporary historians, including those runners in the ruck who can spare no breath for comment, would do well to mark this book in passing. In 320 pages Author Brunngraber, with painstaking Teutonic methodism, has compressed a significant world-history of the past 51 (1880-1931). An alleged novel, Karl and the 20th Century focuses from time to time on its little hero's helpless struggles to keep his head above the flood; but Author Brunngraber's dogged attempt toall the ground results in a kaleidoscope of fact which sometimes dizzies, sometimes dulls...