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...publisher of his other newspaper, the Chattanooga, Tenn., Times. Fifty guests (including the president of the Advertising Club of New York, members of the Merchants' Association, Chamber of Commerce, and many a newspaperman) were transported from Manhattan to Chattanooga on a special Ochs train. A banquet at Lookout Mountain Hotel (new) and the official designation of Mr. Ochs as "Citizen Emeritus of Chattanooga" were features. The Chattanooga Times put out an edition of 160 pages (64 in rotogravure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Fifty Years, Fifty Guests | 7/9/1928 | See Source »

...part of the Harvard authorities, the state police of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, no trace has been found of Neff since he boarded a New London bound trolley at Stonington, Conn., Monday night. Those who are not acquainted with the missing Senior, are asked to keep a sharp lookout for any person resembling him or acting in a conspicuous manner. Neff's description follows: Age 21. Height 5 ft. 10 in. Weight 165. Medium brown hair, out short. Bluish-grey eyes. Believed to be wearing a single-breasted suit of dark brown or grayish mixture. He is known...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NOTICE | 6/13/1928 | See Source »

...Carolinians were sure that the President appreciated his invitation to a mansion on Beaucatcher Mountain, near Asheville. Georgians talked of offering an island estate off their coast. Senators McKellar and Tyson of Tennessee called and offered the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Pound of Chattanooga, on historic Lookout Mountain. Governor Byrd of Virginia and small Boiling Byrd Flood, son of the late Representative Henry D. Flood of Virginia, and C. Bascom Slemp, the President's oldtime (1923-25) private secretary, called and offered the Swannanoa Country Club, in the Blue Ridge Mountains, only four hours from Washington...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: The Coolidge Week: Apr. 9, 1928 | 4/9/1928 | See Source »

There was one figure in the war who received but little publicity a year or so ago--and this was despite the fact that he had the whole Allied forces on the lookout for his mystery ship during the early months of 1917. Count von Luckner remains one of the romantic figures of the war. Though he sank nearly a score of Allied ships, and, what is more remarkable still, though he killed not one man during the course of these sinkings, it remained for his biography by Lowell Thomas to interest the public in his remarkable story...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A DARING GENTLEMAN | 2/14/1928 | See Source »

WANTED, by the New York Symphony -a conductor. For three seasons now, since Walter Damrosch first hinted that his days of active service were numbered, Manhattan has known the New York Symphony Society to be on the lookout for a new and permanent conductor. The German Otto Klemperer (Wiesbaden) was imported for two seasons, tried and found wanting. So was the German Fritz Busch (Dresden) who just completed a trial term of nearly three months. Not for some time, in fact, has anything akin to satisfaction prevailed at a New York Symphony concert until last week. Then Ossip Gabrilowitsch, borrowed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Detroiter Satisfies | 1/30/1928 | See Source »

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