Word: martinisms
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...International Council of Harvard University is holding a final meeting and dinner at the Phillips Brooks House this evening at 7 o'clock. G. K. Martin '32 will preside
duPont's Life Sirs: TIME, of March 17, under "The Press," states that Publisher John Charles Martin's life is insured for $6,000,000-the U. S. record. It is my understanding that Potent Pierre Samuel du Pont, of Wilmington, Del., is insured for $7,500,000. Am I right in this belief? GERALD H. OGAN...
...Some other great lives: John Charles Martin, $6,540,000; William Fox, $6,500,000; Joseph M. Schenck, $5,025,000; Jesse L. Lasky, $5,000,000; Adolph Zukor, $5,000,000.-ED. 100 Glasses Cold Beer
...then swept up the bay over towered Manhattan. They flew in tight, three-plane V-formations which in turn formed larger Vs, a shining flock of metal hawks that filled the city's canyons with the hammering roar of war. At the head of the formation in a Martin bomber, constantly in radio touch with all his following and ordering their every maneuver, rode Lieut. Commander Alfred E. Montgomery, in charge of the flight. Behind him came Martin torpedo planes, sturdy Vought Corsairs, Curtiss Seahawks, Boeing fighters...
...city official and NOT the Milk-Graft Kehoe; promptly offered and promptly printed a retraction. In March 1927, William H. Kehoe sued for libel. Judge charged jury that it might consider the Herald Tribune's retraction in fixing damages. Result: the 6? verdict. Said Appellate Justice Francis Martin last week: "Retractions are often dilatory, offensive, and ineffective. ... In a case where . . . the article was grossly libelous and the plaintiff a man of excellent reputation . . . there should be a verdict for substantial damages. ... A verdict for 6? in this case can be accounted for only by reason of the rule...