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...stage has been erected in front of the squash courts for the performance and chairs will be placed on the triangular park for the audience. The program: 1. Selections Harvard Glee Club T. Flint, Conductor Shoot, False Love Morley Folk Songs Crudele Irene Italian The Pedlar Russian Bonnie Dundee Scottish 2. Pyorrhean Sorority LeGrand L. Thurber Gur Hayes Francis F. Cary William Atrens Von Schrader "The Argentines and the Greeks" "The Flying Trapeze" 3. Violin Selections Malcolm Holmes Ave Maria Schubert Mazurka in G Major Wieneawski 4. Subway Scene in Pantemime with Apologies George R. Shaw, 2d 5. Selections Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GLEE CLUB TO PRESENT PROGRAM ON CLASS DAY | 6/15/1934 | See Source »

...bill by which bankrupt towns and cities may, with the consent of a Federal District Court and 75% of their creditors, compromise their debts to get back on their financial feet. Good news was this for many a ruined town. Such municipalities as Atlantic City, Miami, Asbury Park, Asheville, Flint, Pontiac, Hendersonville (N. C.), Wilmington, Mobile, and Astoria (Ore.) were expected soon to reorganize their debt structure under its terms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Stateless Reception | 6/4/1934 | See Source »

Manhattan's Sydenham Hospital announced that beginning next autumn it would insure white-collar workers three weeks' hospitalization a year for a $10 premium. At Flint the House of Delegates of Michigan's State Medical Association voted to set up a Mutual Health Service which, at a probable cost of about $27 a year per person, will insure full medical care to families earning less than $1,500 a year. People who want a concrete idea of what group medicine can become could look last week to Tacoma, Wash. Tacoma's Dr. Albert Wellington Bridge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Health by Contract | 4/23/1934 | See Source »

Died. Charles Ranlett Flint, 84, retired industrial promoter, international agent, sportsman; of arteriosclerosis, after two years' illness; in Washington. Son of a New England clipper fleet owner, he fitted out warships for Brazilian revolutionists; sold torpedo boats and submarines to Russia, a cruiser to Japan; negotiated the Wright Brothers' first sales of airplanes abroad. He gathered a fortune reputed to be $100,000,000, had a hand in forming so many U. S. corporations that newspapers christened him "Father of Trusts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Feb. 26, 1934 | 2/26/1934 | See Source »

...stockholders had given to its banks during the Depression. There was $8,400,000 supplied in exchange for slow or undesirable assets in member institutions; $3,595,000 supplied by Charles Stewart Mott, vice president of General Motors, to make up for defalcations in the Union Industrial Bank of Flint; $1,600,00 in credit lent by directors of the Group to carry distress loans of officers and employes; $3,384,000 paid by a group of stockholders to buy 18,800 shares of Group stock as relief for the Guardian Detroit Co.; $1,000,000 in cash...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Senate Revelations 7: 1 | 1/1/1934 | See Source »

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