Word: visitores
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...announced. During the manufacture of Zoo in Budapest, the Fox studio in Hollywood contained the third largest menagerie in the U. S. The animal most amenable to direction was the gibbon (Amos), who is accustomed to camera work. Most intractable was a supercilious warthog. In one scene a woman visitor complains about the smell of the animals. The wart-hog gives her a derisive sniff. Director Lee produced the proper expression by offering the wart-hog a carrot, substituting a piece of raw beef to make him disgusted...
...about the famous Harvard University section of Cambridge as many of its professors and instructors, possibly far better known to the public than many of them, was the little brown cocker spaniel "Phantom," the dog of President and Mrs. Lowell. This little dog for years was a visitor to our Hospital when any physical troubles seemed to threaten his good health. Quite unlike many of the visitors to our Hospital, President and Mrs. Lowell often would sit and wait their turn while certain other people were very impatient to have most immediate attention. Little Phantom has at last succumbed...
Died. Bertha Martin, onetime Washington apartment house telephone operator, later society editor of Edward Beale McLean's Washington Post, frequent visitor to "the little green house on K Street" and intimate of "The Ohio Gang"; by her own hand (gas); in Washington...
...little. To save $50,000 they did the obvious-discharged help. (Wages had been cut long ago.) Their new trick saved the balance. They closed exhibition halls in rotation, ten at a time, except Saturdays and Sundays when only four will be shut. The visitor to Manhattan who wants to survey everything in the American Museum must remain in the city at least two weeks-unless he is a student or special investigator. Then he may secure admission to any hall any day. President Davison, who just left Herbert Hoover's service as Assistant Secretary of War for Aviation...
...already existent, the endeavor will meet with little success. Fine as the individual painting and drawing may be, the value of the exhibition to the student is diminished by the fact that a large majority of the works shown are the product of one or two brushes. To any visitor who looks at each new marking card with the hope of finding a familiar name, there is a decided monotony in the exhibition. Presumably not too serious an effort was made to get in touch with all students of Harvard and Radcliffe who dabble in oils or delight in making...