Word: cullen
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...peaceful and law-abiding, received a severe jolt. About 4 :30 o'clock in the morning when "Bill" Brennan, ex-pugilist and proprietor of the Club Tia Juana Cabaret, was eating a good-night meal with his sister (stage name Shirley Sherman) and with his old friend, James Cullen, a State trooper, a man stepped into the cabaret, tapped Brennan on the shoulder, said : "Bill, can I see you a minute?" Brennan, knowing many, but known to many more, did not recognize the man, but, excusing himself from his sister's company, he followed...
...took the two Public Ledgers (morning and evening) of Philadelphia. Last January he reached out to Manhattan and bought the New York Evening Post. In taking control of the Post he took possession of an heirloom. On the list of its editors and owners were Alex ander Hamilton, William Cullen Bryant, John Bigelow, Carl Schurz, E. L. Godkin-great men who had made the Post a landmark of journalism. But these men had passed and the Post was no longer their Post. It was a paper run by a group of wealthy men for the pur pose of satisfying their...
...editorial board consists of : Joseph Cullen Ayer, of the Episcopal Divinity School, Philadelphia; Benjamin W. Bacon, of the Yale Divinity School, New Haven; William H. P. Hatch, of the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge; Charles Michael Jacobs, of the Lutheran Theological Seminary, Mount Airy, Pa.; Frederick William Loetscher, of Princeton Theological Seminary; William Walker Rockwell, of Union Theological Seminary, New York; and Henry Herman Meyer, of the International Sunday School Association and Lesson Committee. Judge Rogers, now aged 70, was admitted to the Bar in 1877. He served as chairman of the World's Congress on Jurisprudence and Law Reform...
...George B. Cullen of Colgate, speaking before the National Republican Club in New York City on February 16, said he was perfectly willing to have any radical come there to make an address, but he would not want to have him on the faculty...
...friends (with a capital of probably not over $10,000) William Coleman, a literary lawyer from Massachusetts, was made editor. Hamilton, himself, exercised a controlling influence until his death in 1804, and wrote many editorials. Coleman carried on with the paper after Hamilton's death. In 1827 William Cullen Bryant became a proprietor and later editor. He attempted to purify journalistic English. In 1836 Bryant was followed as editor by Parke Godwin, who later became his son-in-law. Later John Bigelow took the helm, and after Bryant's death, in 1878, Godwin returned as editor. Three years...