Word: beaches
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Versatile Childe Hassam enjoys beach scenes and many other things. It would require a half-column to list the prizes he has won, beginning with a bronze medal at the Paris Exposition of 1892, and the museums in which he is represented...
John Davison Rockefeller, at Ormond Beach, Fla., got into an airplane for the first time in his life, allowed himself to be taxied up and down the field, would...
...cook had quit. Johnson applied by letter for the job. London wired Johnson: "Can you cook? Salary $25 a month, also take trick at wheel." To qualify, Johnson worked for a week in a restaurant. When the expedition broke up in the South Seas he lived on the beach for a year and learned photography from a stranded French cameraman...
...colyumist reporter for the New York Herald Tribune, editing short cinema "sportlights," editing his magazine The American Golfer, which he recently sold to publisher Condé Nast. Once a year he demonstrates his knowledge of golf by competing in the artists' and writers' championship in Palm Beach. Last week, after eliminating his fellow Nast editor, Frank Crowninshield of Vanity Fair, he won the tournament for the third time, beating Jefferson Machamer, Manhattan artist, 2 and 1. Cartoonist Rube Goldberg, with a handicap of 35, qualified with 140 for 18 holes, then lost his first match without winning...
Supper was a sad, silent meal one evening last week aboard the ice-locked fur-ship Nanuk off the northeast coast of Siberia. Pilots Joe Crosson and Harold Gillam, flying the Arctic beach in the Amguyema River district, had come back with scraps of twisted metal, a side of bacon and a case of eggs from the wreckage of the plane in which, two and one-half months prior, flyers Carl Ben Eielson and Earl Borland vanished on a flight from Teller, Alaska to the Nanuk with supplies (TIME, Jan. 6). The bodies of Eielson and Borland were...