Word: aug
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...treason" for Pastor Niemoller to preach, write and talk as he has against the Nazi system, his published sermons* are undoubtedly among the most controversial ever preached. In Germany the Nazis claim to object only to what they call "Negative Christianity," claim to approve "Positive Christianity" (TIME, Aug. 10, 1936). Pastor Niemoller, in perhaps his most controversial sermon, boldly accused the Nazis of taking in this matter today exactly the line the Jews took when Christ was alive...
Warner scouts discovered him acting in the Pasadena Community Playhouse two years ago. After small parts in China clipper (TIME, Aug. 24, 1936) and a few minor films, he was cast as a boxer with Barton MacLane in a routine picture, first called Trial Horse, then Don't Pull Your Punches. The Warner wisemen looked at the rushes, rubbed their hands. Shelving the picture for the time being, they rushed Morris into Francis Wallace's Kid Galahad, surrounding him with such sure-fire stars as Bette Davis, Edward G. Robinson, Humphrey Bogart. The cinemaudience, just as the Warner...
...That he wrote the following letter to his mother on Aug. 22, 1893, at which time he was president of the Texas Midland Railroad...
...Moraga Valley. But last summer, despite Slip Madigan and its football team (whose expenses ate up all the gate receipts), St. Mary's was sold at auction for $411,150 to a committee of bondholders for default of payments on $1,370,500 in outstanding bonds (TIME, Aug. 2). That ended its fourth life, but St. Mary's still had some left. Four months ago another San Francisco archbishop, Rev. John Joseph Mitty, marched into the bondholders' offices, bought back the college for $715,000. Last week the bells of St. Mary's rang loud & clear...
...other stocks. As a result, while denying the charges, he consented to an injunction forbidding any further manipulation of Checker Cab, Auburn, or stock of any other company in which Cord Corp. had financial interest. Simultaneously, without any explanation, E. L. Cord abdicated from Cord Corp. entirely (TIME, Aug. 16). Since then he has dabbled in Los Angeles real estate while financial circles have dabbled in all sorts of rumors explaining his abdication. Last week, when SEC suddenly pulled the case out of its files again, astute observers wondered whether Cord's abdication might not have been the price...