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...KABC for $55,000, but when and if the F.C.C. does approve both deals, the two stations will presumably be taken over by the Frontier Broadcasting Co. which was incorporated for $10,000 last month by Mr. & Mrs. Roosevelt and an experienced broadcasting man named Harry Alexander Hutchinson. "Hutch," an extremely reticent Arkansan of 38, lanky, suave, slick-haired, has been in the radio business for 14 years, most recently with Hearst Radio, Inc. He will be general manager of the, new chain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: KABC, KFJ2P | 9/20/1937 | See Source »

Socialite Mrs. Forbes Hawkes of Sands Point, L. I., who gives amusing parties, dabbles in painting and adores rabbits, has on her estate a guest house of concrete and composition board known as The Hutch. Paintings, prints, statues and friezes of rabbits fill the building. On the terrace last week there was a new balcony railing of wrought iron. It showed a frieze of galloping rabbits and it was news to the entire U. S. art world, for the installation of the rabbit rail meant that one of the best sculptors and ablest iron workers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Rabbit Rail | 10/12/1936 | See Source »

...Hutch (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer). Cinemaddicts who have felt that Wallace Beery's specialty of pawing at his chest, wrinkling his forehead, scuffing his toes and wiping his rubbery face with the palm of his hand, received too little footage in his previous pictures should be delighted by Old Hutch. It contains practically nothing else. Adapted by George Kelly from a Garret Smith story unearthed from the Saturday Evening Post files for February 1920, it shows what happens to a smalltown ne'er-do-well when he comes on a robber's cache of $100,000. Climax...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Oct. 5, 1936 | 10/5/1936 | See Source »

...businessman. He has been doing most of Stevenson's work?starting up a $2,000,000,000 building & loan company with 12,000 employes?while easy-going Stevenson spent most of his time doling out the patronage. Stevenson's secretary, A. E. Hutchinson, was called "Two-Job Hutch" because of his past record of doubling in political posts. Two Stevenson in-laws were taken on as secretaries. Of such stuff jealousies are bred and out of jealousies tension, inefficiency. At the White House, tension is not yet felt. The President remains the easy, smiling, unhurried team-captain, supercharged...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Tired Team | 11/13/1933 | See Source »

...operates every day, delivers babies in small kitchens on the same table where potatoes have been peeled that morning, walks through a slashing to a hutch for an appendicitis operation, is called from bed to diagnose a belly ache, is kept from bed by a broken arm. He still gets about four hours of sleep a night and in the mornings the knives sometimes tremble in his hands. He smokes too many cigarettes. This again is not heroic. People are sick and people are poor and other people take care of them. This, too, is stinking and sweaty...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Student Vagabond | 6/1/1932 | See Source »

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