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...Lamson, Jr., 6G., of Cambridge, Mass.--appointed instructor in English and Tutor in the Division of Modern Languages for one year from Sept...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: APPOINTMENT OF EIGHT NEW MEN IS ANNOUNCED | 4/9/1935 | See Source »

...Jose, Calif, court where David Lamson was for the second time last week on trial for murdering his wife (TIME, Sept.11, 1933, et seq.), a crucial question arose. The walls of the bathroom where Mrs. Lamson died were spattered with blood. Did the blood spurt there from the tub, in which her husband claimed she had fallen and fatally cut the back of her head? Or was the prosecution right in contending that the blood got on the walls as Mr. Lamson repeatedly bashed in the back of his wife's head with an iron pipe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Blood Spurt | 4/8/1935 | See Source »

...maximum spurt with the flesh held clear. But in a normal cut where the edges of the wound do not gape, blood from the back of the head would well rather than spurt. This proves that a severed occipital artery cannot throw blood around a bathroom as the Lamson defense contends...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Blood Spurt | 4/8/1935 | See Source »

Only Scovill left in Scovill is H. Lamson Scovill, a director. The $40,000,000 company is completely dominated by the sons and grandsons of the late Chauncey Porter Goss, who went into Scovill as an errand boy during the Civil War, was president from the turn of the Century to the end of the War. Present head of Scovill is Edward Otis Goss, an affable hard-headed Yankee of 69 who is Waterbury's first citizen and a peer in the Connecticut industrial realm. Below him are four Goss vice presidents, most important of whom is his brother...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Corporations | 10/29/1934 | See Source »

...Sept. 10 the San Francisco Chronicle burst out with a streaming black headline: LAMSON WINS NEW TRIAL. It would be hard to guess who was most astonished: Hearst's San Francisco Examiner which apparently had been badly scooped or Chief Justice William Harrison Waste of the California Supreme Court or David A. Lamson, sitting in his death cell at San Quentin Prison. Last year a San Jose jury had found the young Stanford University Press salesmanager guilty of murder after it refused to believe his story that his wife Allene had slipped in the bathtub and fatally fractured...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Medicine & Chaser | 10/22/1934 | See Source »

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