Word: wolfs
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Telephoned after the broadcast, the N.B.C. expressed themselves as "delighted" and that "it was a most gratifying experience" for them to put the show on. Highlights of the preview of the 1937 show were the singing of "There's No Wolf Around My Door" by Gaspar G. Bacon, Jr. '37, and "The Heart of a Fool" and "Someday" by Laurence L. Davis...
...Come Across", the ninety-first annual production of the Club was written in collaboration by Gaspar G. Bacon, Jr. '37, Arnett McKennan '37, and Benjamin Welles, 2nd '38. Many hit tunes will be broadcast tonight, among them, "There's No Wolf Around My Door" by Bacon, who wrote both the music and the lyrics. "Someday" and "Heart of a Fool" will also be played. McKennan and Cammann Newberry '37 collaborated in their composition Newberry wrote the music and McKennan developed the lyrics...
...fireworks and a beauty contest were part of an international goodwill and progress celebration which wound up with a 16-mi. all-comers' dog race. Wearing a gold and ivory crown, Beauty Queen Marguerite Lee saw John Allen's team of "Irish Wolves" (Malemute, Irish setter and wolf stock) win, on average time for three heats...
...join with him in working as a gang to use their pneumatic drill more efficiently and thus increase production per man. Stakhanov was taken to Moscow, feted by Stalin, loaded with all sorts of presents, including a phonograph with the record Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf, and ever since the whole laboring mass of the Soviet Union has been urged, exhorted, tempted and commanded to emulate Stakhanov. Sluggards who do not want to speed up their work as Stakhanov did, have in some cases assassinated Soviet managers who tried to Stakhanovize their plants (TIME...
...most diligent figure in Britain's newspaper world. In his silver-&-black modernistic office he works 16 hours on weekdays, eight on Sundays. Every night at 10 he telephones his press superintendent to get last-minute details of headlines, pictures, stories. Austerely aloof, this lone wolf of Fleet Street, who envies Press Barons Beaverbrook and Rothermere only their titles, seldom talks to them direct, receiving their messages through a lieutenant...