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...time when Baltimore would be the nation's biggest seaport and the Sun the most famous paper in the U.S. Baltimore never made it, but long after Abell's death in 1888, it seemed for a while that the Sun might actually achieve his dream: in the halcyon days of Henry Louis Mencken and Frank R. Kent, for years the dean of U.S. political columnists, the name of the Sun was second to none...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Sun's Orbit | 4/11/1960 | See Source »

...Orator, John B. White, could still joke on Class Day about problems which were all too soon to pass well beyond the laughing stage. Depression or no, the college years were, for the Class of 1934, truly the halcyon days compared with what lay before. As White put it, "So sails the Ship of 1934 into the Sea of Life. We have spent many happy hours smashing bottles over thy prow, proud ship, even going so far as to remove the figurehead and install a bottle-opener." The bottle-smashing was over, and as President Conant handed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Class of '34: First To Live in Houses Under Lowell's Plan | 6/9/1959 | See Source »

...moved it--by the scruff of the neck--to southern California, and changed the characters to modern types. None of these types is original. Most of them, oddly enough, are very funny. The hero is portrayed as the sort of healthy youth who hung around with Superboy in the halcyon days of Superman D.C. publications; his friend becomes a bop musician temporarily without an instrument; the footman becomes one of those stereotyped Mexicans, all sombrero and somnolence; and so on. Joel Crothers, Joel Henning, and Al Graubard, respectively, play these roles, and Caroline Cross is the heroine. What they lack...

Author: By Julius Novick, | Title: Three Farces | 2/27/1959 | See Source »

Over the past summer, during those halcyon days when the University's better half is replaced by the short shorts set, Harvard changed her telephone number--it matters little why--and thereby precipitated a small crisis to which we propose a timely solution...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Word to the Wise | 9/27/1958 | See Source »

Crowding into Milan's seedy, smoke-filled Halcyon Theater, 547 Social Democratic bigwigs shouted and orated in impressive abstract discussions of Marxist theory, but were unable even to agree on a platform for Italy's general elections, now only six months off. After years of unchallenged dominance of the party, moody, long-faced Giuseppe Saragat, 59, twice Vice Premier of Italy, was seriously threatened by 36-year-old Matteo Matteotti, whose only program was unification after the elections. Matteotti did not explain how Social Democrats could win votes by, in effect, promising to become Nenni Socialists right after...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: Muddle in Milan | 11/4/1957 | See Source »

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