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Here in the hands of the law are the brothers Anthony and William Esposito, bandits and cold-blooded killers who four months ago shot down a linen-firm office manager, raced through the crowded ground floor of Manhattan's big Altman store, and killed a policeman before they were caught near Fifth Avenue (TIME, Jan. 27). At their trial they played mad, one never speaking nor noticing, the other screaming and recklessly banging his head against a table, but a jury swiftly found them guilty of first-degree murder. Still their exhibition was not over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: To The Death House | 5/19/1941 | See Source »

...recipients are Myron Kalish, Brooklyn, N. Y., George R. Walter, Washington, D.C., Robert S. Ivie, Iowa City, Ia., John G. Forbes, Jackson Heights, L. I., N. Y., Albert L. Goldman, Everett, Mass., Milton Altman, New York, N. Y., Benjamin B. Ferenez, New York, N. Y., Chester I. Lappen, Des Moines, Ia., Peter K. Morse, Detroit, Mich., Frederick S. Pillsbury, Manchester, N. H., Myron Sommel, Forest Hills...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 23 AWARDS GIVEN TO LAW STUDENTS | 3/26/1941 | See Source »

They ordered the operator to take the elevator down, ducked out into the street, disappeared into B. Altman's big department store...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: SLAUGHTER ON FIFTH AVENUE | 1/27/1941 | See Source »

...Wood, known around Dalton as Sister Kate, made some fancy, fringed spreads for Wanamaker's, by 1929 was producing as many as 600 a day, often had 1,500 at once out in the homes of her tufters. To swank B. Altman in Manhat tan Sister Kate sold $60,000 worth of spreads a year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MANUFACTURING: Catherine Evans1 Bedspreads | 9/2/1940 | See Source »

...paintings, prints, drawings and pieces of sculpture in the Academy show, 331 were by nonmembers. All 525 had a staid, collective conformity. To Academicians, as usual, went the pick of the 16 prizes. Painter Abram Poole got a $750 Altman Prize for Young Dancer, a demure Victorian damsel in a flowing pink dress. To the new president, tweedy, grey-haired Hobart Nichols, went an award for Winter Pattern, one of his customary snow-covered landscapes. Said pleased President Nichols: "The Academy is like a pendulum to a clock-it assures a rational, regular, orderly progress. It has no room...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Academic Art | 3/25/1940 | See Source »

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