Word: denver
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...members of the committee, as announced by Schmidt last night, are: Samuel Adams of Brookline, George S. Ford of Belmont, James B. Hallett of Denver, Colorado, George G. Hedblom of Chicago, Hlinois, Robert C. Holcombe of Cambridge, Herbert Jaques, Jr. of Boston, Malcolm B. McTernen, Jr. of Andover, Richard G. Pedrick of Beverly, John N.B. Pell of Westbury, L.I., Curtis Prout of Chestnut Hill, Edward B. Simmons of Baltimore, Maryland, Richard MacC. Walsh of Dorchester, Ira A. Watson of Brockton, Townsend U. Weekes of Oyster Bay, L.I., and Leavitt S. White of Plainfield...
...major factor in the tercentenary celebration were taken yesterday evening t a meeting in the Union when officers and committees were chosen. Herbert Milton Irwin, Jr. '37, of Port Washington, Long Island, was elected president; Harvey McClary Dawson '37, of Washington, D.C., vice-president; James Brewster Hallett '37, of Denver, Colorado, secretary; and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr. '37, of Washington, D.C., treasurer. Three councillors-at-large, Herbert B. Nichols '32, John H. Morison '35, and William A. Wright '37, were also elected...
...three years. Given a year's time, however, Proprietor James thinks he can pull it through alive. The 200-mile link he built in California to connect Western Pacific with Great Northern, completed in 1931, has not yet revealed its full traffic possibilities. The Dotsero cutoff west of Denver, to be finished this year, is expected to direct transcontinental traffic to the Denver & Rio Grande-Western Pacific route (TIME...
...Timber Line"; that should serve to introduce it effectively to any American reader, for the name of Bonfils, if not that of Tammen, has been blatted to the four corners with almost the virulence which the man himself would have employed in scorching a commercial enemy. Bonfils and his "Denver Post" have been held up in magazines and less full-blooded papers as the dual climax of bawdy journalism; they have been ridiculed as cranks and denounced as blackmailers their saga has been amplified and coloured even beyond its own rich Western blood-hue. And I refer to the Post...
...Chicago barber's chair, made a noose of two cravats and hanged himself to an iron cross beam. Next day he was to have pleaded guilty to the kidnapping in 1932 of Haskell Bohn of St. Paul (ransom: $12,000) and in 1933 of Charles Boettcher II of Denver (ransom: $60,000), whom he hid on his Dakota turkey ranch. Next day Sankey's accomplice, Gordon Alcorn, was sentenced to serve the rest of his natural life in Leavenworth for his part in the snatchings...