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...disgruntled go-between was Emmet Queen, who claims that it was he, not Beman Gates Dawes (brother of the Vice President) who brought about Mr. Dillon's recent sale of the Pure Oil Co. to the Ohio Cities Gas Co. for $23,500,000. Mr. Queen asserts that Mr. Dawes was Mr. Dillon's "dummy" in the deal, and wants $1,100,000 go-between commission for himself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Dillon in Court | 3/12/1928 | See Source »

...Freshman outfit will be composed of the following: C. D. Breckenridge, G. T. Emmet, N. F. Glidden, R. R. Stebbins, and M. D. Wheelock. The University team C will be represented by Henry Lockhart ocC., Erlund Field '28, A. W. Richardson '28, J. C. Rueter '28, and R. H. Barbour...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN AND TEAM C MEET SQUASH OPPONENTS TODAY | 2/25/1928 | See Source »

James Lawrence, head usher, and F. S. Grant, assistant-head usher, will have for their assistants the following: Robeson Bailey, A. G. Churchill, N. S. Clifford, F. A. Clark, Winslow Carlton, W. T. Emmet, T. F. Kane, A. B. Kloumann, Hulburd Johnston, R. R. Ketchum, A. N. Geoch, T. G. Moore, Guy Murchie, C. McK. Norton, John Parkinson, K. D. Robinson, H. F. Schwarz, E. W. Sexton, E. R. Todd, and W. S. Youngman. These ushers will work in shifts during the dance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JUNIOR DANCE USHERS SELECTED BY COMMITTEE | 2/17/1928 | See Source »

...following men will play in the Junior-Freshman game: N. S. Barnes '29 vs. Donald Merriman '31; Mark Hopkins '29 vs. R. E. Stebbins; T. D. Mumford '29 vs. G. T. Emmet '31; H. H. Proctor '29 vs. H. B. Hollins '31; H. T. Cobb '29 vs. G. H. Bartol '31; W. W. Nett '29 vs. R. L. Tower '31; Robeson Mailey '29 vs. G. M. Phelps...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CLASS SQUASH TOURNEY WILL BEGIN PLAY THIS AFTERNOON | 2/8/1928 | See Source »

...Queen's Husband. As diarist of an unidentified king, discovered last week acting oddly upon the stage of a Manhattan theatre, Robert Emmet Sherwood develops ramifications. He sets up a satire on royalty, gilds it with hot romance and stripes the second act with melodrama. One hears an undertone of Bolshevism and unmistakable echoes of the derision that dogged Queen Marie across our country. Mr. Sherwood dares destroy any trace of consistency by marrying off his Princess to her plumber's son at the end with as glossy a happy ending as ever was pasted on the movies which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theatre: New Plays in Manhattan: Feb. 6, 1928 | 2/6/1928 | See Source »

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