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Word: graces (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...date" girl -- who, in turn, will become "the old-fashioned" girl to a later generation. . . . The Hobart College Herald sums up the arguments of many of the attacks in this thoughtful fashion; "The outstanding objection to the modern dance is that it is immodest and lacking in grace. It is not based on a natural and harmless instinct for rhythm, but on a craving for abnormal excitement". The Dartmouth Jack-o'-Lantern: "We're a dizzy people. The shimmy proves that, without the ghost of a need for further proof". From the New York University News: "Overlooking the physiological aspects...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 5/14/1921 | See Source »

...complete cast is as follows: "Hagoromo", A Noh: Tennis Miss Madeline Brine '22 Hakuryo Leonard Ware '21 A fisherman Honderson Matthew '23 Chorus W. Sherwood '24, C. D. Morgan '24, Peter Wooldridge '23 "The Blind: Miss Ethel Woodworth '23 Oldest Blind Woman Miss Florence Scully Unc. Miss Grace Cobb '21 Blind Girl Miss Louise Dalby Madwoman Miss Louise Daly Three Praying Women Miss Janet Fairbanks Unc. First Blind Man G. M. Kendall '24 Second Blind Man R. C. Burell Unc. Third Blind Man K. O. Mott-Smith '22 Oldest Blind Man Conrad Salinger '23 Fifth Blind Man P. R. Harmel...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PICK CASTS FOR THREE DRAMATIC CLUB PLAYS | 5/7/1921 | See Source »

...navels which do not more than tell a pleasant story pleasantly. America, with all it boasted sense of humor take life more strenuously, if one is to believe its novelists, than do its stoild cousins of England. If it he British stolidity that shows itself in the light grace of the novels of such writers as William J. Locke and Temple Thurston, then let us hope that American humor may sometime find itself endowed with a touch at least of that admirable vice. "Main Street" and "Ell" present their problem to the rolled excellently well, but "The Beloved Vagabond...

Author: By R. D. E., | Title: AN ENGLISH TALE OF LON DON AFTER THE WAR | 5/6/1921 | See Source »

...very large. She was huge in every sense, weighing much more than three hundred pounds and yet there was a singular grace in her form and her movements. Her limbs we of the girth of breadfruit-trees, and her bosom was as broad and deep as that of the great June of Rome, but her hands were beautiful, like a plump baby's with fascinating creases at the wrists, and long, tapering fingers. Her limbs eyes were hazel, and they were very brilliant when she was merry or excited. Her expansive face had no lines in it, and her mouth...

Author: By M. P. B., | Title: O'BRIEN WRITES AGAIN OF SOUTH SEAS | 5/6/1921 | See Source »

...ability shown to present the true character of his sitters through close and studious observation of the physical forms and expressions that reveal the soul, that the popular appeal of Mr. Pollak-Ottendorff's works lies. His portraits, though it seem paradoxical, are large miniatures,--having all the grace, refinement, and texture of the miniature with the distinction and carrying power of the larger work. Though there be somewhat of the "photographic" quality in the drawings, the integrity, soundness, and uniqueness of the artist's work, its sympathetic humanity in bubbling youth or kindly age, are exceptional...

Author: By B. K. L., | Title: EXHIBITION OF PORTRAITS IN PENCIL | 4/15/1921 | See Source »

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