Word: franked
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...Fitzgerald '23 of Everett; John Gaston '21 of Boston; Mitchell Gratwick '22 of Buffalo, N. Y.; Arthur Dean Hamilton '21 of Milton; Charles Frederick Havemeyer '22 of New York City; Arnold Horween '21 of Chicago, Ill.; Wynant Davis Hubbard '22 of Readville; Richard Sears Humphrey '21 of Hyde Park; Frank Jewett Johnson '22 of Memphis, Tenn.; Richmond Keith Kane '22 of Marion; Charles Clark Macomber '22 of Newtonville; George Owen '23 of Newton; Robert Minturn Sedgwick '21 of Cambridge; Charles Alfred Tierney '22 of Dorchester; James Randolph Tolbert Jr. '22 of Hobart, Okla.; Thomas Smith Woods '21 of Boston...
Gerald Bamer is very successful with the rather difficult role of David; his timidness might easily be carried to extremes, but Mr. Hamer keeps it plausibly within bounds. Frank Westerton, as George, is a typically "silly ass" English man, while the other parts, with one or two unimportant exceptions, are consistently well-handled. A word might also be said for the "mob" of sporty English aristocrats, who contribute an ever-recurring ripple of laughter with such highly, accented expressions as "demn it!", "well, dear old precious!", "hello, old wonderful!" and the like...
...successful man of the world moves about inconspicuously. He is still the center of his own world. This is what makes him . . . "an opinionated little cuss." He is as full of argument as an egg is of meat. He lives on slang. . . . There are two remedies. . . . One is a frank and outspoken attitude . . . addressed to the student, to the end that he discover antidotes to his limitations. The other, and the most effective, is . . . a full year of employment between high school and college.0...
...Policy" and "The Political Conditions of Allied Success," are but three of Mr. Angell's works which have stirred the publics of England and the continent and brought statements of high commendation from such men as Lord Esher, President of the Imperial Defence Committee of Great Britain, and Sir Frank Lascelles, former British Ambassador in Berlin, and from the great bulk of the English press...
There is the fact, too, of the long wall, of the postponement of any announcement of decisions until after the elections, for fear that the interests of the Democratic party might be injured. This can be nothing more than a frank admission that favoritism and injustice have played a part in the Secretary's determination of Naval merits. What is more proof, Admiral Sims name has been erased from the new list, probably as a rebuke for his outspoken plea for fairness; such an erasure, however, is not more than natural; it is but in accordance with the administration...