Word: dawn
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...Harvard by playing the feminine lead. An unusual scene will find Charles I. Nevin '34, Arthur J. Barrett '34, Robert L. Lowe '34, Allan W. Sherman '34, Joseph F. Ferriter '34, Albert Haberstroh '35, and Robert S. Brookings '35 depicting wood nymphs who dance through the woods at dawn to the music of the pipes...
...scene at the famed Reichstag Fire Trial when No. 2 Nazi Goring lost his temper and roared at Defendant George Dimitroff: "You'll be sorry yet if I catch you when you get out of prison, you scoundrel!" (TIME, Nov. 13). By a long coincidence it was the dawn of the first anniversary of the Fire last week when Nazi jailers unlocked the underground vaults where still lay three defendants at that trial, all acquitted, all Bulgarians, all Communists: Dimitroff, Wassil Taneff and Blagoi Popoff. (The fourth defendant, Marinus van der Lubbe, was convicted and beheaded.) In haste...
...forever lost to the cause of liberalism. But the significant point here is not Mr. Smith's lack of liberalism; it is his unfamiliarity with a few large landmarks in American constitutional law. The provisions which he suggests are the conventional child labor provisions, sponsored by agitators since the dawn of the twentieth contury, and effectively caught in the impasse of Hammer V. Dagenhart. The supreme court there decided that the interstate commerce regulation of the federal government could not operate against any product on the basis of its antecedent conditions of manufacture. So far as the court is concerned...
...night long crowds lined the Rue Royale and the squares before the Royal Palace and the Church of St. Gudule. Before dawn the roofs were black with watchers and one exhausted patriot had fallen out of a tree and been killed. Soon police and soldiers began to line the route along which Albert's body would pass. About breakfast time hawkers were passing up & down selling rolls and chocolate bars and mirrors on sticks for short people to see over the crowd...
Just before dawn next morning, Lieut. Norman Burnett ran into a howling snow-storm on the Cleveland-Chicago route. The ceiling closed down and he missed a beacon. Then his gasoline line clogged and he went into a tight spin. He had no mail so he took to his parachute. In landing he fractured...