Word: centralized
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...President wrote to President Patrick E. Crowley of the New York Central saying he had received an invitation through C. C. Paulding, railroad lawyer, and regretting that he could not attend "the 100th anniversary of the granting of the charter of the Mohawk-Hudson Railroad Company...
...Situation. The consensus of meagre despatches was that the soldiers of Super-Tuchun Feng, who have dominated Peking for 18 months (TIME, Nov. 3, 1924, et. seq.), found themselves quite outmaneuvered, early in the week, by the besieging troops of the Manchurian Super-Tuchun Chang, and those of the Central Chinese Super-Tuchun Wu (TIME, April...
...five miles apart, they were each discoverable by a small temple seen from the sea, and might be approached in a launch by a creek or canal leading to a lake, lagoon or bay. These cities were on the trade route between northern Yucatan and Mayan centres in lower Central America, particularly Guatemala. Like Dr. Gann, the Mason-Spinden expedition found some of the ancient shrines still in use by Indian hunters and chicle* workers, who mingle Catholic and Mayan rites in their worship. Next week TIME will catalog archeological findings in Europe, Asia, Africa...
...special trains tugged out of Manhattan one day last week. They carried Chairman Chauncey M. Depew* and President Patrick E. Crowley of the New York Central, besides many another railroad official and their guests. With them were President Emeritus Arthur T. Hadley of Yale, Bishop William T. Manning and U.S. Senator Royal S. Copeland. All were bound for Albany and Schenectady...
...cold in the country. Or it means that he can go to New York (which is what he probably will do) and celebrate the joyous springtime in theatres and other places, so far from pastoral thoughts that he will shudder whenever the taxi careens along the doubtful freshness of Central Park. Those on the Dean's List have long since fitted; perjury and persuasion are the order of the day; still the undergraduate must wrap his legs around his chair until this morning before picking up his suit-cases and heading for the South Station...