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...director for three cinema companies. And, best of all, he is the author of one of the most successful burlesques ever written: Hazel Weston, or More Sinned Against Than Usual. This Shinnanigan has been played continuously for 23 years and translated into seven languages. Year ago, along with Myrtle Clayton, or Wronged from the Start, it was bought by Warner Bros. for the cinema...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: One of Eight | 3/11/1935 | See Source »

John Andrew Moore '38, of Clayton, Missouri, was elected president of the Union Society last night before the debate held in the Union...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Union Society Elects Moore And Four Other New Officers | 3/6/1935 | See Source »

...corporation engaged in interstate commerce shall acquire . . . the whole or any part of the stock . . . of another corporation engaged in interstate commerce, where the effect of such acquisition may be to substantially lessen competition between [them].-Clayton Anti-Trust...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Girdler Anti-Trusted | 2/18/1935 | See Source »

Last week in Cleveland without the slightest warning the Department of Justice cracked down with an anti-trust suit to block Tom Girdler's merger. At the same time suit was filed against seven individuals under an obscure section of the Clayton Act, charging interlocking directorships in ten independent steel companies including Republic and Corrigan, McKinney...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Girdler Anti-Trusted | 2/18/1935 | See Source »

Every molecule of pure "heavy water" contains hydrogen of the doubleweight kind identified by Columbia's Harold Clayton Urey in 1931. Long before Dr. Urey was awarded the Nobel Prize for his discovery (TIME, Nov. 26), experimenters were finding that heavy water did strange things to small animals and plants. It killed guppies, tadpoles, flatworms, prevented tobacco seeds from sprouting, dimmed the light of luminous bacteria, made mice appear tipsy and terribly thirsty. Then Professor Ingo Waldemar Dagobert Hackh of San Francisco's College of Physicians & Surgeons guessed that a slow, steady increase in the amount of heavy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Bachelor's Cocktail | 2/4/1935 | See Source »

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