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...Middle Atlantic States' entries were hardest hit by the artists' boycott. Non-boycotters in New York were Gifford Beal, Charles Burchfield, Guy Péne DuBois with his well known Mr. & Mrs. Middle Class, Ernest Lawson, Jonas Lie, Luigi Lucioni, Henry Varnum Poor, John Sloan. Ablest was Eugene Speicher's Nude Back...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: First National | 6/1/1936 | See Source »

President, John Howard Eric, of Stamford, Connecticut to succeed Egbert W. Fischer '36; vice-president, Irving Gifford Fine '37, of Brookline, to succeed Frederick B. Tolles, 36; secretary, Edward Larrabee Barnes '38, of Chicago, to succeed Eric...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Glee Club Chooses Eric, Fine, Barnes | 5/20/1936 | See Source »

...address of which he is constantly forgetting.- "My platform," he announced in fastidious Bostonese, "will be the Horse & Buggy, or Save the Constitution." In the Republican split of 1912 Boies Penrose temporarily lost his State leadership to the Bull Moose faction, which included an ardent Young Roosevelt worshipper named Gifford Pinchot. While one set of Philadelphia voters was lifting the name of Penrose up last week, another group was setting the name of Pinchot down. In a district inhabited largely by factory workers whose cause she has championed many a time on the picket line, red-haired Mrs. Gifford Pinchot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PENNSYLVANIA: Penrose Up, Pinchot Down | 5/11/1936 | See Source »

...officials re- plied that they were the "backbone" of the Bell System, that A. T. & T. really lost money furnishing them. C, To the suggestion that A. T. & T. made inordinate profits on the rentals and finally on the sale of the telephone equipment, President Walter S. Gifford replied that the reduction of service charges in 1927 saved the operating companies about $17,000,000 per year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Bits for $400,000 | 5/11/1936 | See Source »

First company to comply with the Stock Exchange's suggestion was the biggest company listed on the Hoard, American Telephone & Telegraph. President Walter Sherman Gifford told the 350 A. T. & T. stockholders who turned out for the annual meeting in Manhattan last week that their company's profits for the twelve months through March 1936 were $130,000,000 compared to $118,000,000 for the same period through March 1935. Those figures were not for the entire Bell System, earnings of which were reported only through February. But to find out what the parent company...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Reports v. Reports | 4/27/1936 | See Source »

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