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...Cleveland, Ohio; Paul C. Henshaw '36, of Rye, N. Y.; Harold B. Jaffee '36, of New York, N. Y.; Wells Lewis '38, of New York, N. Y.; Arthur J. Linenthal '37, of Brookline, Mass.; Daniel W. Meyer '36, of Scarsdale, N. Y.; Philip T. Shahan '38, of Clayton, Mo.; and Robert E. Shalen '37, of Brooklyn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ELEVEN JOHN HARVARD SCHOLARSHIPS ARE GIVEN | 11/29/1935 | See Source »

Next in order was a review of five regiments at Fort Clayton, recently branded a "suicide post" by rambunctious Publisher Nelson Rounsevell of the Panama American (TIME, Sept. 30). Following the review, the President pointedly wirelessed Major General Harold B. Fiske, commander of the Panama Canal Department who had sued Publisher Rounsevell for criminal libel and won: "Will you publish to your command my recognition and appreciation of the fine soldierly bearing and appearance of the troops at Fort Clayton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Cigarets for Sharks' Teeth | 10/28/1935 | See Source »

Such is the platform of a quarterly ($3 a year) to appear next week, published by Willett, Clark & Co., Chicago religious book house, and edited temporarily by Charles Clayton Morrison of The Christian Century, Last week Christendom had found 4,000 thoughtful, learned, serious people as paid subscribers. Press run of the first issue will be 8,000 copies. Thicker than most religious publications, Christendom is better printed, has a secular-looking red cover. Full of theology, philosophy and urbane erudition, the first issue contains a short story by Zona Gale, articles by the Archbishop of York, Philosophers William Ernest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: New Magazines | 10/28/1935 | See Source »

Last week the assembled millionaires were greeted officially by Founder-Presi-dent Clayton Sedgwick Cooper but the bill for the banquet at Boston's Hotel Copley-Plaza was footed by the Committee's New England members, including Speculator William ("Big Bad Bill") Danforth; Colonel Edward Howland Robinson Green, Hetty Green's son; Vice President & Treasurer Charles G. Bancroft of United Shoe Machinery; J. A. Turrell, retired Woolworth executive. One day some of the members went to Leslie Buswell's home in Gloucester, Mass., then for luncheon at the nearby showplace of John Hays Hammond...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Millionaires' Talk | 10/14/1935 | See Source »

...months ago a series of suicides among enlisted men at Fort Clayton, in the Canal Zone, caused Publisher Nelson Rounsevell of the Panama American to charge the commander of that post with working his men mercilessly under the tropical sun, driving them to smoke marijuana cigarets which led to madness and to death. When an Army investigation resulted in a whitewash, the post commander and the commanding general of the Canal Department had Publisher Rounsevell indicted on five counts for criminal libel (TIME...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: N. R. | 9/30/1935 | See Source »

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