Word: villainously
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...ANGRY MAN-Leonard Ehrlich- Simon & Schuster ($2.50). If anything could make you believe that old John Brown, hero-villain of Osawotamie and Harper's Ferry, was a great soul, God's Angry Man could. Author Leonard Ehrlich has stuck close to facts but insists his book is a novel, not biography or history. Its tone is sombre without relief. As the cumulative tragedy comes to its climax few readers will wish for any but the inevitable outcome. For a man who had lived the life of old John Brown, his end was best...
...score was 2 to 0 for Chicago. Side-whiskered Guy Bush, who looks like a nervous villain in a melodrama, had been through the Yankee line-up once, pitching carefully, without allowing a hit. At the start of the fourth. Bush walked Combs. made Scwell ground out, frowned darkly when Ruth hit a whistling single to right. Gehrig, stamping his feet on the caked dust, waited till the count was two balls and two strikes. His bat met the next pitch, a Bush screwball, squarely. The ball traveled into the screaming right field bleachers for a homerun...
...that won the game. A villain foiled, Pitcher Bush went completely to pieces in the sixth, when he walked four batters. He was replaced by Spitballer Burleigh Grimes, who worked for St. Louis in last year's Series. By the time the sloppy inning was over. New York had five runs on two hits and no Chicago errors. The Cubs got four runs in the last three innings, but so did the Yankees. New York 12, Chicago...
...should reasonably have solved the situation and ended the picture in three minutes. The origin of his power is given as his eyes ("hypnotism, nothing more") and Edmund Lowe's affable face works hard trying to look mystical. Tear-gas is used to make his eyes impotent and give Villain Lugosi a chance to prolong the picture. Resurrected from the bottom of the Nile. Lowe out-eyes Lugosi and the death-ray explodes, leaving civilization untoasted...
...plays to be considered are as follows: "Marching as to War" by Robert E. Sherwood '18; "Father William" by Donald Ogden Stewart; "The Genius and His Brother" by Sil Vara; "Lazzaro" by Luigi Pirandello; "The Villain is a Hero After All" by Eugene Walter; "The Life is Real" by Elmer Rice; "The Third Day" by John Van Druten; and "Dr. Harmer's Holiday" by Sir Arthur Pinero. None of these plays has been produced before in this country, which is in keeping with the Club's policy of producing new plays as often as possible...