Word: justins
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...small audience yesterday afternoon witnessed the introduction of the new Clear-Tone piano at the music room of the Piano-Craft Company. Justin Sandridge, a young Boston pianist, played a pretentious programme of Bach, Scarlatti, Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin, and Griffes. Mr. Sandridge's playing was full of feeling and a primitive and facile movement of rhythm. In the beautiful fourth Ballade of Chopin he exceeded himself in the passionate reiteration of the main theme in the middle section; also his final number, the Legends of St. Francis Walking on the Waves, brought forth the necessary brilliance and virtuosity that Pere...
...respective divisions of the conference, but Southern California provides more entertainment. Southern California's waterboy is none other than Irvine ("Cotton") Warburton, phenomenal little quarterback of the football team. Besides tending the bucket, sponging the faces of sweaty players, he serves as a sort of assistant to Coach Justin ("Sam") Barry, lately of Iowa. One of Coach Barry's stratagems...
...codes. Three hundred and seventy-seven more are yet to come. General Johnson makes all his industrial colonels do duty for many codes. The majority of new colonels came from the ranks of the four brigades into which NRA was originated (TIME, Nov. 6). Typical was Ralph Justin Fogg, Manhattan consulting engineer, longtime Lehigh engineering professor who built cantonments and shipyards during the War. Administrator Fogg got automatic sprinklers, concrete masonry, vitrified clay sewer pipes, four other authorities. Another colonel was wiry little Colonel George S. Brady, engineer and Wilsonian trade commissioner...
...fight between the Wichita, Kans., Eagle and the Wichita Beacon which started five years ago when the thick-skinned Brothers Levand-Max, Louis and John-bought the Beacon from Senator Henry Justin Allen, last summer became Wichita's best newsstory. Last week the thin-skinned Brothers Murdock-Victor and Marcellus-who own the Eagle were under the impression that the Levands had suffered a stunning defeat. Eagle headlines happily screamed the news that the two liveliest Levands, Max and Louis, had been indicted on five counts, for misleading advertising...
...Cohen, M. I. Cohen, C. R. Comstock, R. H. Cook, B. D. Davis, W. A. Dickson, J. D. Dorr, R. W. Drury, J. N. Edson, L. C. Farley, W. A. Francis, G. S. Franklin, A. H. Fuller, J. A. Garber, J. E. Gardner, P. E. Geier, R. W. Gilder, Justin Glickson, R. S. Goodyear, Davies Gratwick, S. S. Greeley, J. M. Hartwell, C. A. Haskins, P. W. Hengerer, W. F. Hickey, I. T. Holden, P. G. Hunziker...