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Last week the name of James Clement Dunn, long bowed to in Washington, spread through the land. James Clement Dunn, high school graduate, lawyer, Manhattan architect and U. S. Navy lieutenant, entered the State Department after the War. He received assignments to Madrid, Port au Prince, Brussels. Then he went to Washington and it was discovered that he, smooth of hair, chiseled of chin, impeccably attired, was expert at mapping out White House ceremonials. It was he, for example, who lately and finally ranked "the ladies of the land," as follows: Mrs. President, Mrs. Vice President, Mrs. Chief Justice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Master of Ceremonies | 1/16/1928 | See Source »

...purely Congressional parties, the above ranking does not hold good. Not even James Clement Dunn ever split the hair of precedence between Mrs. President of the Senate (who is also Mrs. Vice President of the U. S.) and Mrs. Speaker of the House, who remain equally august in their husbands' bicameral spheres. Perhaps this hair will never be split, for, last week, James Clement Dunn's efficiency at policing drawing rooms was recognized by his promotion to the head of a newly created "Division of Protocols" in the State Department. His newly added duties will be to arrange...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Master of Ceremonies | 1/16/1928 | See Source »

Last week, Governor Clement Calhoun Young of California cried: "Save the beaches!" In a newspaper article he declared that oil interests were menacing the "spectacular charm," "the permanent scenic and spiritual enrichment," of the littoral playground of Californians and their visitors. Let oil-drilling be remitted, asked Governor Young, until means could be found to prevent the defacement and pollution of scenery whose value is "unmeasurably greater than the value of all the oil. . . . " Governor Young's article appeared in the Los Angeles Examiner, owned by Oil man William Randolph Hearst...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: In California | 1/16/1928 | See Source »

...week from today in the Harvard Club of Boston are carried through successfully. With the possible exception of Thomas Hitchcock Jr. '22, most of the best polo players in the country will attend the meeting. The mallet-wielders who have signified their intention of being present include John Bishop, Clement Burnhome, G. M. Carnochan '14, R. L. Gerry '00, B. N. Hamlin, J. R. Macomber, G. S. Mandell '89, Q. A. S. McKean '13, Devereux Milburn '06, and H. L. Movius...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMING POLO DINNER WILL DECIDE SPORT'S FUTURE HERE | 1/13/1928 | See Source »

Warden Court Smith was beleaguered in his office. To reach the prison wall, he would have to cross a bald courtyard under whatever fire the convicts might loose. He telephoned to Governor Clement Calhoun Young in Sacramento, 25 miles away, to send over soldiers, bombs, artillery. He ordered all available riflemen to the prison wall and consulted with aides whether to starve out the revolt or crush it at once...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: California Convicts | 12/5/1927 | See Source »

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