Word: starks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...more bloody noses. The play tells of the Easter rebellion of 1916 when English machine guns shot holes in a fiery burst for Irish freedom. Some of the characters are patriots; some of them are drunken philosophers; one is a chubby prostitute in scarlet silk. The story tells the stark sorrow of a young bride whose patriot husband dies from the bite of English bullets. She loses her baby; loses her mind...
...without several bravas for Lulu McConnell: she may be vulgar but she's very funny and she has a laugh that does things to your vertebrae and almost shatters the Wilbur chandeliers. Betty Sarbuck, as Alice, Penfant terrible, is excellent. And there is an extremely personable young man named Stark Patterson who is well, we're just about out of the better adjectives...
This art museum is one of Toledo's dearest prides. The citizens, not content with stark commercialism, determined to bring to their city all the concentrated beauty that a staggering sum of money could buy. It stands today one of the finest public collections in the western world. It was unquestionably the influence of this museum that prompted Lasalle & Koch to engage Artist Covey as their window-dresser. Nor did they engage him to help sell shoes and pots and furniture. Not one item of their stock was to be placed in their windows during the twelve days the pictures...
DARTMOUTH HARVARD Stickler g. g. Salmon Stone l.f.b. r.f.b. Stollmeyer Stark r.f.b. l.f.b. Clarke Makepeace l.h.b. r.h.b. Carr Lawrence c.h.b. c.h.b. Barnes Cohen r.h.b. l.h.b. Rudd Schmitz c. c. Kerness Woodbridge l.o.f. r.o.f. Haskel Eastman l.i.f. r.i.f. Danielian Annis r.o.f. l.o.f. Driggs Marx r.i.f. l.i.f. Keefe...
...occasion for loud applause. True, art has a habit of coming to Brattle Street but usually it is in less interesting and more turgid forms than distinctive movies. The program of films scheduled for the coming months at the local guild hall is remarkable; it includes such diversions as "Stark Love", supposedly as near unpremeditated art as a camera man can approach, Janning's "The Last Laugh", and other foreign and native pictures which are made with at least one eye on an intelligent public and off the box office...