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Nazis. At Graz, where Vice Chancellor Winkler spoke, he was quickly reminded that there are still Nazis in Austria. Dozens of them rioted at the meeting place, setting off smoke bombs, ringing bells, roaring "Deutschland über Alles," until 100 were arrested, 20 injured. In spite of diplomatic protests, the Nazi radio station at Munich continued its series of evening blasts against the Dollfuss Government. The speeches given by different Nazi spokesmen every evening are particularly annoying to Austrian officials because they know that almost every Austrian farmer listens to them. They come on at 9 p. m. immediately after...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AUSTRIA: Eve of Renewal | 9/25/1933 | See Source »

...Physician to Corporate Bodies"-a title he liked so much that he reprinted the article as a pamphlet. Other writers, hostile to capitalism and pressagentry, have called him "Corporation Dog Rob ber," "Little Brother of the Rich," "Minnesinger to Millionaires," and even "Poison Ivy." Ivy Lee would state his own occupation as "adviser in public relations." Whatever the title, the noteworthy facts are that Ivy Lee first sold the "public relations" idea to Big Business, and made an unequalled personal success...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Lee & Co. | 8/7/1933 | See Source »

...more English novel?in the Kipling, sun-never-sets-on-it sense ? than Peking Picnic would be hard to imagine. Authoress Bridge puts her not always tacit low opinion of all foreigners in a sufficiently high light, repeats with religious fervor the Kipling creed of England über alles. Broad-minded if not exactly up-to-date, the judges of the $10,000 Atlantic Monthly Prize unanimously picked Peking Picnic out of 750 manuscripts submitted for the contest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Baedeker Hollandaise | 9/12/1932 | See Source »

...Aldrich '31, Gr. E.S., of Barrytown, New York; E. S. Amazeen '31, 1GB, of Melrose Highlands; R. C. Ber- resford '28, 2L, of New York City; C. H. Burgess '31, 1G, of Sheridan, Wyoming; W. W. Foshay '31, Henry Fellow, of Port Chester, New York; C. E. Galston '30, 2L, of Woodmere, New York; J. C. Hubbard, Jr. '31, 1G, of Wayland; W. H. MacHale '31, 1GB, of Douglaston, New York; R. W. Meadows '32, of Buffalo, New York, Vernon Munroe, Jr. '31, Fiske Scholar, of New York City; J. H. Pratt '30, 1L, of Washington, D.C.; A. N. Webster...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROCTORS AND ADVISERS FOR 1932-33 ANNOUNCED | 5/10/1932 | See Source »

Miss Cornelia M. van Asch van Wyck, world president of the Y. W. C. A., arrived in New York last week. Mem ber of a famed Dutch family (her father was a Deputy in the States-General, two of her brothers are in the diplomatic service), she helped organize the Dutch na tional Y. W. C. A. in 1920, headed it from 1926 until 1930 when she became the first Continental president of the World's Council...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: THREE LADIES | 4/18/1932 | See Source »

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