Word: doves
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Died. Jimmy Calhoun, parachute jumper, at Atlanta, Ga. In "stunting" with his parachute, Mr. Calhoun lost his grip, dove 400 ft. to the ground beside his wife who had been watching...
...more than a month since Aimee Semple McPherson, famed and wealthy evangelist, owner and builder of the $1,000,000 Angelus Temple, Los Angeles, dove into mystery through a broken wave (TIME, June 7). She was taking her second dip of a June afternoon; her secretary sat reading on the beach; thousands of people were bathing all round her, but with that dive Aimee McPherson vanished as completely as if she had stepped through a looking-glass into the Never-Never Land. Last week Aimee McPherson, in a gingham gown spattered with mud, tottered into the police-office of Douglas...
Through the rain at the head of the petticoat parades rode equestriennes on white horses, attired in long blue mantles and three-cornered hats, while behind straggled the grim retainers. One delegation wore the regulation pilgrimage "jumper" with the word "Pax" and a dove of peace across the center of the back...
...more evident to the world at large as cooperative projects gain ground. But it is not surprising that such as Sweden, which has played the role of interested spectator in Europe's sword-rattlings, should be the most thoroughly pervaded with the new nation. One remembers that the dove has always found it easiest to alight in Geneva the Hague, or Stockholm than in Paris, London, or Berlin...
Thanks to Funnyman Wallace Irwin,* all the world knows the inner workings of the mind of a Japanese school boy. Thanks to The Dove, pinko-liberal journal of campus opinion at the University of Kansas, a small part of the world last week learned some inner workings of a Japanese college boy. A college boy evidently encouraged to leave Japan by missionaries. Wrote one Seizo Ogino to a friend in Nippon, a friend evidently about to come to the U. S. to finish his theological studies...