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...Florida. U.S. Judge Joseph Lieb ruled that a clutch of state school-segregation laws were unconstitutional. But instead of ordering schools directly to accept Negro applicants, Minnesota-born Judge Lieb called attention to the state pupil-placement laws, which give assignment authority to local school boards. Until pupil-placement laws are challenged and declared unconstitutional, said he, Negro applicants will have to abide by school-board assignments...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RACES: Trials & Triumphs | 1/5/1959 | See Source »

...Kart E. Lieb, president of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, under whose auspices the fund is conducted, announced a $150,000 nation-wide goal. He left the collection methods up to the separate colleges...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: H.A.A. Tabulates Olympic Moneys | 12/2/1947 | See Source »

...nice young Greenwich Village couple who have a nice time until Mr. North opens the living-room closet to get the mixings for a drink and a corpse falls out. This rigid, sudden corpse-fall, the best in many dramatic seasons, is executed by a young actor named Robert Lieb who gets no program credit. Thereafter the Norths and their friends are suspected, and an elderly postman who learns something about the crime is whacked to death in the kitchen. Mrs. North is chirpy, lightheaded, dizzily bent on helping the police. Once, when she isn't deliberately trying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: New Play in Manhattan, Jan. 27, 1941 | 1/27/1941 | See Source »

...Manhattan restaurant one morning last week three people sat breakfasting on highballs. They were Rev. Joseph J. Leonard, 40, a Roman Catholic priest; Joseph Lieb Steinmetz, 22, a Jew turned Presbyterian theology student; and Mrs. Steinmetz, 17, a minor showgirl whom he had married a fortnight before. The three had met casually the night before. From the restaurant they returned to the Knights of Columbus Club Hotel and the Steinmetz room where another bottle of whiskey was consumed. When Steinmetz began feeling groggy, Father Leonard suggested he lie down. He heard the priest say to his wife...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Sluggish | 12/10/1934 | See Source »

...teams of U. S. major league baseballers have made exhibition tours of Japan since the War. The last tour, organized by Sportswriter Fred Lieb of the New York Evening Post, ended last fortnight when a team including Pitcher Grove, Leftfielder Simmons and Catcher Cochrane of the Philadelphia Athletics, First Baseman Lou Gehrig of the New York Yankees, Captain Frank Frisch of the world's champion St. Louis Cardinals, and Shortstop Walter ("Rabbit") Maranville of the Boston Braves, docked at San Francisco. They had played 17 games in Japan, won them all, been seen by 500,000 people. Last week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Japan: Fan | 1/4/1932 | See Source »

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