Word: adolphe
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...Rabenold '37, Robert W. Raymond '37, George H. Reed '38, William D. Richmond 1G., Edward H. Riddle '37, Oliver E. Rodgers '36, Selden T. Rodgers '36, Howard E. Roman '36, Lawrence Ross '37, Robert S. Russell '35, Ernest Sachs, Jr. '38, George A. Savage 1S.A., Karl E. Schevill '37, Adolph B. Schneider 1M., Robert F. Sharp '37, William Shelmerdine '37, Stephen S. Stanton '38, Arthur W. Todd '35, Frederick B. Tolles...
Marriage Revealed. Marion Talley, 28, retired Metropolitan Opera soprano; and Adolph Eckstrom, 37, her Manhattan coach; in New City, N. Y. last month. Miss Talley's first marriage, to Pianist Michael Raucheisen, also her coach, was annulled in 1933. Last week she and her husband were on their way to California, where she has a five-year cinema contract with...
...Tenn. where, at eleven, he began delivering papers; how he became printer's devil and learned the pressman's trade. It recalled his dogged determination and the editorial shrewdness by which he made the Chattanooga Times a thriving. potent newspaper. Then came the day in 1896 when Adolph Ochs, 38. heard of a chance to acquire the New York Times. To a publisher friend he confided: "I don't believe I'm a big enough man for the job." "Don't tell anybody," was his friend's advice, "and they'll never find...
Also in his first year Adolph Ochs took another bold step which was significantly prophetic. He rejected $150.000 worth of advertising-enough to ensure the Times's success-which had been offered by the Tammany-controlled city government, because he feared even the appearance of evil. Less than four years after his arrival in Manhattan the Times was out of debt. In the next 38 years it amassed a daily circulation...
...Adolph Ochs's impulsive genius was responsible for his first successes. He held what he had gained by surrounding himself with able men, like Editor Rollo Ogden, and famed Managing Editor Carr Van Anda; like his Business Manager Louis Wiley, who died last month (TIME, April 1), and his own Son-in-Law Arthur Hays Sulzberger, who married his only child Iphigene. With Son-in-Law Sulzberger at the helm, the Times, in the words of its obituary, is a monument with "meaning enough for one life...