Word: martin
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Lemuel Bowden '36, Leonard K. Bristol '38, Kenneth W. Brown '35, John H. Burns '37, Courtlandt Canby '36, Gabriel G. Cillie 2G, Manley B. Cohen '36, Louis H. Conger '37, Stewart M. Dall '38, Nixon de Tarnowsky '35, Richard H. Dennis '36, George Ehrenfried '35, John H. Eric '37, Martin S. Erlanger '38, Egbert W. Fischer '36, Walter D. Fisher '37, Hans W. Forster '36, William D. Fraser '38, Emil J. Ganem '37, John H. Gilbert '36, James H. Goulder '36, Nathaniel B. Groton...
...George Landauer and Dr. Martin Rosenblueth announced that Palestine can absorb 40,000 German Jews a year if enough money is raised. On file are applications from 5,000 German families who wish to settle there during the next six months...
Next week his brother, Martin Insull, is scheduled to go on trial in an Illinois court on charges of embezzling $344,000 from the Middle West Utilities Co. In January Samuel Sr. is also to stand trial in a State court charged with permitting $66,000 of the alleged embezzlements of his brother. Moreover, against Samuel Sr. and seven of his associates is still pending a Federal indictment charging violation of the Bankruptcy Act. Not unless and until he is freed on these other charges can he claim complete vindication...
...Game of Names." The New York Post had only 60,000 circulation when David Stern bought it from Curtis-Martin year ago. The new owner tried to change the paper from a genteel, arch-Tory organ to a rowdy New Deal standardbearer. He succeeded mainly in making it a sensational hodgepodge. By fits & starts, the Post claimed to have 75,000 steady readers when it began its "Game of Names" contest last August...
...listen, Smith's urbane William Allan Neilson urged the cultivation of feeling and imagination as Education's next step. "The incuriousness of the girl of college age," declared he, "is one of the most appalling things I know of." Brearley's trustee president, Lawyer George W. Martin, proudly told how Brearley was developing feeling and imagination among its girls through sculpturing, dramatics, woodworking, painting. Five hours passed and the banqueters went home convinced more firmly than ever that in Brearley's the girls' private school had reached its zenith...