Word: freeman
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Otherwise I don't see any great difference. As far as the individual soloists are concerned. Who am I to say whether Bud Freeman played worse trips in 1929 than he does today. I like old jazz as much as the next guy. In fact, I might go so far as to say that some of my best friends are jazz records. I happen to prefer the more recent stuff, but I've burned gallons of midnight oil listening to Louie and Bessie Smith. All I'm asking from a lot of critics is that they...
Awards for "Compensated Church Work." under which students at the School do part-time in church parishes in the greater Boston district were granted to Lewis V. Chapman; Lawrence E. Cox; John A. Dahlstrand; John W. Eager; Frederick E. Ellis; William H. Fox; Edwin R. Freeman; Thomas W. Jolly; Harold B. Kuhn; Nathaniel Lawrence; Robert E. Lewis; Eric N. Linblade; Frederick A. Lovell, Jr; Richard V. McCann; Alexander D. MacNaughton; Malcolm Matheson; Carol L. Shuster; Thomas B. Smith; John P. Voss; Leon E. Wright; Harold O. Worcester; and John L. Yenches...
...give shelter to 20,000 homeless from boroughs which have suffered more. In the swank West End many vacant homes and apartments were turned over to the poorest evacuees from grimy Limehouse and other East End slums. The once pro-Nazi Lord Redesdale, whose daughter the Hon. Unity Valkyrie Freeman-Mitford came home from Naziland with a bullet mysteriously embedded in her throat, offered his big London house to 90 homeless people (TIME, Sept. 30) but received a rebuff. The first family to arrive from East End slums were Jewish. On being told they might have what had been...
While Unity Valkyrie Freeman-Mitford, aristocratic friend of Adolf Hitler, still lay so deathly ill somewhere in England that physicians dared not extract from her neck the bullet she mysteriously acquired in Munich last year, her father, Lord Redesdale, turned over his 30-room town house to London's County Council for the use of slum dwellers made homeless by Nazi bombs...
Resonance. Don't be ashamed of singing in the bathtub, advises Dr. Freeman, but "place your head directly above a wash bowl and hum loudly, starting with a low note and gradually raising the pitch [until you] find the bowl strongly reinforcing your voice tone. . . . An entire room, especially a small one, can some times be made to resonate in this way." Theory: different substances have different periods of natural vibration; when the voice finds them, they vibrate in sympathy. Men make better bathroom thrushes than women because modern plumbing is out of phase with higher-pitched voices...