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That Japan's blood brotherhoods still flourish disturbingly appeared last week when the notorious Black Dragon Society announced Tokyo festivities in honor of a representative recently dispatched to Japan by Ethiopia's hard pressed Emperor. This representative, potent Daba Birrou, accompanied the Duke of Gloucester on H. R. H.'s sporting tour in Ethiopia (TIME, Nov. 10, 1930). He ranks among the Emperor's closest friends, though he reached Japan entitled merely "Secretary to the Honorary Japanese Consul for Ethiopia in Osaka, Mr. Chuzaburo Yukawa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: God-Sent Troops | 9/30/1935 | See Source »

...Howard watched the clock, listened nervously for the roar of Colonel Turner's low-wing monoplane. Just as time was about up, he heard it, saw the golden Wedell-Williams racer streaking out of the murk for the finish. Ever the showman, Pilot Turner zoomed into a grandiloquent flourish over the stands, banked off into the haze, landed. Excitedly, the timers calibrated their watches, finally announced the closest Bendix finish in history. Pilot Howard had won the 2,046-mi. race by 23½ seconds. Third was handsome Russell Thaw, son of Evelyn Nesbit & Harry Kendall Thaw...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transport: Bendix & Thompson | 9/9/1935 | See Source »

Jerusalem Artichokes are sunflowers which have a starchy, tuberous root. They flourish in semi-arid regions. Like yams in Southern States, corn in Prairie States, barley in Northern States, potatoes in Idaho and Maine, sugar beets in the West, sorghum in the South, sugar cane in Louisiana, Jerusalem artichokes can be turned into alcohol. If produced on a large scale such alcohol could be produced for from 7 to 10? a gallon, figured Dr. Leo Martin Christensen of Iowa State College. At that price it is cheap enough to mix with gasoline as a motor fuel, especially if any need...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: For Farm & Factory | 5/20/1935 | See Source »

...cows and a 1,200-lb. Guernsey bull named Klondike Iceberg-first bull ever born in Little America; 15 emperor penguins, of which one was decidedly indisposed; the knowledge that seal meat looks like liver, but tastes different; indisputable proof that the common cold and other germs flourish in Antarctica; samples of unidentified bugs which live in snow and melted ice pools; the memory of four months alone in an ice hut, "lonely as hell," studying weather conditions, reading 85 books and letting his hair grow to shoulder-length...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Hero's Return | 5/20/1935 | See Source »

...stay if a social balance is to be maintained. As it is now, rather than pay for meals they do not eat, a large number of Club members move each year from the Houses into the dingy boarding-houses off Mt. Anburn Street. Since the Clubs continue to flourish at Harvard, even in the face of the House Plan, and since the University recognizes their existence, the present discriminatory policy of meal contracts should be revised and placed on a more equitable basis...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SHADOW ON LEHMAN STEPS | 4/23/1935 | See Source »

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