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...popping up with mysterious regularity. It was the name of Henry Grunewald, a shadowy Washington operator who apparently enjoyed a large and useful set of acquaintances among the influence peddlers. Theron Lamar Caudle, the ousted Assistant Attorney General, testified that it might have been Grunewald who called Chicago Attorney Abraham Teitelbaum and warned him to pay off a tidy item of $500,000 if he wanted to stay out of income-tax trouble. Charles Oliphant, the resigned Revenue Bureau counsel, admitted that he was a close friend of Grunewald and had talked to him about the Teitelbaum case. Frank Nathan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INVESTIGATIONS: The Mystery Man | 12/31/1951 | See Source »

Oliphant had been a nervous wreck since the day Chicago Attorney Abraham Teitelbaum told the subcommittee a saga of shakedown. The main point of Teitel-baum's story was that a "Washington clique," including Oliphant, was in the market for bribes from income-tax payers in trouble. Oliphant promptly quit his job as chief counsel of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, complaining that such a "fantastic" story should never have been permitted in public testimony. Such "vilification" was too much to take, he said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Pride in My Name | 12/24/1951 | See Source »

...chorus of frenzied cries wailed up from Capitol Hill as a House subcommittee continued to poke at the Internal Revenue Bureau scandals. Almost all the voices were raised in answer to the shrill tones of a sharp-eyed Chicago lawyer named Abraham Teitelbaum. Attorney Teitelbaum, who described his late client Al Capone as "one of the most honorable men I ever knew," is in tax trouble with the Government-a matter of at least $130,000 in unpaid income taxes. It looked as if this trouble would be settled without much difficulty, he testified last week, until two men named...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INVESTIGATIONS: A Saga of Shakedown | 12/17/1951 | See Source »

...Abraham Teitelbaum's shakedown story opened the door for another sudden exit from the Bureau of Internal Revenue. Day after the Chicago lawyer testified, Charles Oliphant, the bureau's chief counsel, dashed off an angry letter of resignation to Harry Truman. The charge that he was part of a clique seeking payoffs was "fantastic," he said. The "attacks, vilification, rumor and innuendo are beyond the point of human endurance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Another Exit | 12/17/1951 | See Source »

...America, and began broadcasting activities in the spring of 1940. Within a year, Harvard followed suit with WHCN (The Harvard CRIMSON Network). These two stations were among the original members of the first college network--IBS (Intercollegiate Broadcasting System), founded by two young Brown alumni. David Frost and George Abraham, who had set up WBRU while undergraduates...

Author: By Arthur Oesterreicher, | Title: Ivy Network Will Feature Program Swaps Next Year | 12/12/1951 | See Source »

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