Word: tenderer
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...tainted Col. Düsterberg has held out persistently for a separate organization. Day after Col. Düsterberg's dismissal. Founder Seldte stepped up to a German micro- phone and proudly & publicly announced his own admission to the Nazi ranks and committed his entire organization to the tender mercies of Adolf Hitler. There are at least 1,000,000 Stahlhelm members in Germany. The move gave Handsome Adolf command of more than 1,600,000 trained men, including his own Storm Troops in Germany and Austria. Only the lack of arms and equipment prevented it from being...
Secrets (United Artists). "In every marriage there are secrets-secret joys, secret sorrows-which only one man and one woman know." When Mary Pickford voices this tender aphorism toward the end of her first picture in two years, she is an old lady explaining to her grown-up children why she and her elderly husband (Leslie Howard) wish to go out West and spend their declining years quietly with each other. The secrets of which their children are ignorant are well known to the audience...
...courage of noble Jack Dalton, a son of the soil, beneath whose flannel shirt beats an honest heart. The old homestead is saved, the dastardly murderer of Alphonso Pettijohn is handcuffed by detective Hawkshaw in the nick of time, pure Nell and honest Jack clasp each other in a tender embrace, and an audience worn out with hissing the villain and cheering the hero leaves the Peabody Playhouse mulling over the pleasant taste of the nineties left by the Stagers' presentation of "Gold in the Hills, or The Dead Sister's Secret," a twentieth century conception of nineteenth century melo...
Paul deBarsy deGive '34, of Atlanta, Georgia, was elected captain of the 1934 Varsity hockey team at a meeting of the squad yesterday afternoon. For the last two years he has been Varsity goal tender and one of the outstanding members of the team...
...made his Metropolitan début as the Chevalier des Grieux in Massenet's Manon. He had stopped the performance when he first came on stage, a tall, broad-shouldered, unaffected person unlike the run of chunky, strutting tenors. He had stopped it again with his quiet, tender singing of the second-act drama. He had taken more than 35 curtain calls, clinging tight to the hand of Soprano Lucrezia Bori, who had done much to help him around the stage, on which he had never rehearsed. But if with his acting Tenor Crooks reminded people of a solemn...