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...control room are carefully closed (one cardinal rule for every announcer it soon becomes as natural as breathing), and both girls settle down to watch the clock. 7:28:20--28:30--35--the announcer signals sharply, the tech girl fiddles with controls, and the opening bars of the triumphal march from Aida, Radio Radcliffe's theme, go over the air. Another quick signal, the music cuts down. The announcer takes a deep breath. "This is WRRB, Radio Radcliffe, now signing...

Author: By Rona C. Harris, | Title: R-Squared Link With Tech Comes At Peak of 10-Year Development | 5/8/1952 | See Source »

...with each of his gnarled books, public and critical uneasiness grew. Why did he have to be so depressing, so frank about sex? Answered Hardy: "The crash of broken commandments is as necessary ... to the catastrophe of tragedy as the noise of drums and cymbals to a triumphal march." Not all his readers saw it so; when Tess came out as a serial, many of them wrote Hardy begging for a happy ending. He could not satisfy them, for life, as he felt it, has no happy endings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poet in Self Defense | 4/7/1952 | See Source »

Wobbling Sphinxes. To build the new production of Verdi's triumphal tragedy of the Nile, Bing had brought in the same crack team that gave Verdi's Don Carlo a new glow last season: Broadway's Maggie Webster and Designer Rolf Gerard. They soon found out what everyone from Bing to Conductor Fausto Cleva definitely did not want: "All those wobbling sphinxes, painted canvas temples, unrehearsed supers in ridiculous costumes, and four-footed beasts." They set out to make the new Aïda "as simple and uncluttered as possible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Little Egypt Off Broadway | 11/19/1951 | See Source »

Embry got into Spain all right-curled up in the tail compartment of a British agent's car. Meanwhile, in matted beard and filthy clothes, he had witnessed the Germans' triumphal entry into Paris, carefully studied the layout of a strategic airfield, and spent at least one comfortable night cheekily sleeping in the bed of an absent German general. Like most men who escaped through Occupied France, he speaks almost with awe of the peasants and plain folk who unhesitatingly risked their lives to help...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Flyer's Flight | 8/27/1951 | See Source »

...fluttering flags and handkerchiefs as he clipped through commuter stations along the way. Boston turned out in midafternoon to greet him as though he were just home from the wars; 20,000 packed Dewey Square to cheer his arrival and half a million lined the route of the triumphal motorcade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICAL NOTES: The General Goes to Boston | 8/6/1951 | See Source »

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