Word: prophete
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...following program will be given at the Zionists Night concert at the Pops this evening at 8.15 o'clock: Coronation March from "The Prophet" Meyerbeer Suite from "Carmen" Bizet Polovisian Dances from "Prince Igor" Borodin Invitation to the Dance Weber Beriloz "Kol Nidrel" Bruch "Italin," Rhapsody Casella Overture to "Sakuntala" Goldmark Kammenoi Ostrow Ouverture Solennelle, "1812" Tehaikovsky
...went when he landed, Big Bill Haywood was again a hero for a little while. They put him in charge of a mining enterprise at Kuznetsk, which he managed so badly that it failed. In Russia, Big Bill's vast radicalism seemed faintly conservative; he was a prophet no longer and he became slowly almost without honor. He lived in the Lux hotel with the rest of the important useless exiles from foreign countries; newspaper correspondents brought him U. S. papers or boxes of paprika which he liked and could not buy abroad...
...main facts about Joie Ray are well known. He has blond hair and has spent most of his life driving a taxicab in Chicago. His nickname is Chesty because he usually announces that he is going to win and tells what his time will be. He is the best prophet among runners. He is the only American who has run the mile in competition under 4:20 more than six times. He holds with Paavo Nurmi the world's indoor mile record. Last month when he finished third in the Boston marathon (TIME, April 30) his first long distance...
...following program will be presented at the Pops concert in Symphony Hall tonight at 8.15 o'clock: Coronation March from "The Prophet" Meyerbeer Kol Nidert Bruch Violoncello Solo: Jacobus Langendoen Overture to "Baruffe Chiozotte" Sinigaglia Overture. "Fingal's Cave" Mendelssohn "Danse Macabre." Symphonte Poem Saint Saens "Italian." Rhapsody Casella Bacchanale. "Tannhauser" Wagner Second Hungarian Rhapsody List
...well-worn remark to the effect that a prophet is not without honor save in his own country, has more than once gone the way of all good epigrams--to its refutation. And now, exception has once more been taken to it, for, in the current number of The Nineteenth Century and After, appears an article by P. S. Richards which extols, in no uncertain terms, Professor Irving Babbitt as among the foremost, if not the most eminent, of contemporary constructive critics...