Word: guggenheimers
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Month ago the 14th season of free concerts began, called for the first time the Daniel Guggenheim Memorial Concerts in honor of the mining tycoon, who with his brother Murry sponsored them during his lifetime and after his death last September (TIME, Oct. 6) left provision for their perpetuation. A first night audience of 18,000 stood, heads bared, as the band played Frederic Francois Chopin's Funeral March in Daniel Guggenheim's memory...
...Harry F. Guggenheim, Ambassador...
...tuition fee: from $85 to $130 per quarter, depending upon the school in which they are enrolled. Though it is their custom to affect corduroy trousers, lumberjack shirts and other unassuming gear, more than half own automobiles. Some fly their own planes: Stanford's airport, operated by the Daniel Guggenheim Aeronautic Laboratory, is one of the few college-owned fields in the U. S. and it is taxed to its capacity on big-game days. Nearby is the stadium which seats 90,000 people. The vast Stanford campus includes one of the finest Pacific Coast golf courses, two lakes...
...Margaret Morton Eustis of Washington, D. C., granddaughter of the late Levi Parsons Morton, Vice President of the U. S. under President Harrison; to David Edward Finley of York. S. C., Special Assistant to Secretary of the Treasury Mellon; at Washington. Her aunt is the wife of Harry Frank Guggenheim, U. S. Ambassador to Cuba...
Honored. Frank Gillmore, president of the Actors' Equity Association; with the annual gold medal of the American Arbitration Association "for distinguished service in the establishment of commercial peace through arbitration"; in Manhattan. Previous medalists: Steelman Charles M. Schwab, U. S. Ambassador to Cuba Harry F. Guggenheim, Manhattan Realtor Frederick Brown, Rear Admiral Richard Evelyn Byrd...