Word: julians
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...fine tradition, had been a money-loser. Briefly after 1923 it looked as if Publisher Curtis might succeed where Wall Street had failed. Through Son-in-law John Charles Martin, Mr. Curtis poured money lavishly into the Evening Post, gave it the finest new plant in the city. Socialite Julian Starkweather Mason was hired as editor to give the sheet circulation. But still the Post did not fatten and thrive. Lately it has been losing money at the rate of $25,000 per week. When the experiment of making it a tabloid last September failed Publisher Martin could think...
...committees are; Adams, Charles Feibleman '36, G. Raymond Dennet '36; Brooks, Abraham J. Creidenberg '34, Powers McLean '35; Dunster, Edward N. Kimball '35, Samuel W. Pillsbury '36; Eliot, John A. Strauss '36, Victor H. Kramer '35; Leverett, Julian S. Bach '36, C. Lowell Harriss '34; Lowell, Charles R. Cherington '35, Herbert A. Fierst '35; Kirkland, Joseph A. Weber, Jr. '35, Frank J. Casale '35; Winthrop, William H. Jefferys '36, Leonard C. Levin...
...past nine years, President Roosevelt ate Thanksgiving dinner with the Warm Springs patients. He was in fine fettle, cracking little jokes at his critics and the Press. Introducing Julian Boehme of Atlanta, an amateur magician, the President announced: "I am going to ask him to entertain us with a number of things we have never been able to solve. Perhaps he will put on something about the gold standard...
First tenors: John H. Burns '37, Edward T. Clapp 3Dv., Louis Harap Gr., Henry G. Pearson '34, John G. Seeger '37, Frederick B. Tolles '36, Julian A. Wilhelm...
...addition to Edmund M. Rowe '27, the coach, the following Harvard men will go to Connecticut: Julian S. Bach, Jr. '36; Victor H. Kramer '35; George Gore '34; Morris J. Litwack '34; Clement L. Harriss '34; and Joseph R. Lourie...