Word: loudly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...questioned. He joked police and newsgatherers: "Who killed Lingle [TIME, June 23, et seq.] and Zuta? That's easy -Santa Claus! . . . I'm a lover of outdoor sports . . . vice president of the Central Cleaners & Dyers ... a reputable businessman. I make $25,000 a year." But he was loud and earnest in wanting the Press to know he never had blamed Capone for the St. Valentine's Day Massacre. When he was freed under a total of $15,000 bail a few hours before the Aiello slaying, he skulked off, disappeared. He was no Big Shot last week...
...Washington Crusaders chapter held no dinner but uncorked its campaign with a loud report. It last week issued a 1930 Speakeasy Map of Washington, compiled from a seven-month raid record of the capital's police. The map showed 934 black dots, many of them grouped around the Capitol, the White House, the Department of Justice building and other Dry and official centres. Two dots reputedly were on Government prop erty. An accompanying statement said: "The Police Department has made an average of four and a half raids per day, including Sunday, during the time covered by this report...
...teammates and is greeted with an awe-inspiring silence. As soon as he starts to speak, however, the situation is changed. Hank Barber will yell across the room to ask Shep Wolff if he is going to the show, Bromberg and Johnson will discuss their economics assignments in rather loud voices. Bill Phinney will probably offer a suggestion or two as the rest of the audience tap their glasses or plates with the silverware, calling for order and quiet "Chuck" Crehan announces his authority and asks the fellows to give the speaker a chance to be heard...
Married. Lawyer John Charles Straton, second son of the late loud Baptist Preacher John Roach Straton of Calvary Church in Manhattan (died a year ago, TIME, Nov. 11); and Helen Sanford, daughter of Lawyer Francis Baird Sanford of Warwick, N. Y.; by Preacher Hillyer Hawthorne Straton (Lawyer Straton's brother) at the Reformed Church in Warwick...
...tragedy, on Sept. 15, 1830, an ex-cabinet minister died at the inauguration of a then new-fangled mode of transportation: William Huskisson, the Duke of Wellington's Secretary of Colonies, bumped by the locomotive at the opening of one of Britain's first railroads (Liverpool & Manchester). Loud was the outcry then against "dangerous" railroads...