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Word: marvinism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...finer shades of political corruption, U. S. newsreaders have a ready sympathetic throb for the lone graft fighter. To Author Brooks such a figure looms so large that he ventures to draw the picture of an upstanding, small-city editor with solemn, biblical strokes. James Andrew Marvin, lonely Honest Man, is presented through the reverent chronicles of his five children (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John and Ruth). He emerges hard-hitting, high-minded, bad-tempered. Fighting heavily, with more goodwill than technique, he is defeated time and again by the subtler feints of a canny rival editor, a burly bartender...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Haunted Horseplay | 2/20/1928 | See Source »

John Barker Jr. 1L, Marvin Burt '28, E. F. Clark Jr. '28, Le Baron R. Foster '28, Russell Foster '28, Z. B. Keim '29, E. J. Latham '30, J. W. McCullock 2L, A. T. Safford 2L, J. E. Spike '29, P. W. Williams '25, Douglas Vernon...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Union Announces List of Valentine Dance Ushers and Patronesses--Festivity to Take Place on February 17 | 2/11/1928 | See Source »

...Forest, Ill., an old man was having his breakfast. Suddenly, he put his napkin down on the table; before the servant could reach him, he had fallen to the floor across the arm of his chair. An hour or two later, the newspapers in Chicago had headlines saying that Marvin Hughitt, Finance Chairman of the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad, had suffered a paralytic stroke. The morning after the old man had been carried upstairs from his breakfast table, the newspapers published extra editions to say that Marvin Hughitt had died, without regaining consciousness. Some days later every wheel stopped...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Death of Hughitt | 1/16/1928 | See Source »

Ninety years ago, Marvin Hughitt was born on a farm in Genoa, N. Y. When he was 15, he was a telegraph operator in Albany. Ten years later he went without sleep for two nights to supervise the complicated departure of trains carrying Union soldiers to Cairo, Ill. While the railroads were pushing their bright tentacles across the Northwest, Marvin Hughitt was becoming assistant general manager of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, manager of the Pullman Palace Car Co., general superintendent of the Chicago & Northwestern, for whose present 10,000 miles of track he is largely responsible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Death of Hughitt | 1/16/1928 | See Source »

Like famed Chauncey Mitchell Depew, another survivor of a fibrous generation of railroad men, Marvin Hughitt was bothered by newsmongers because he continued to go to his office every day, despite the fact that he had reached an age never attained by less sturdy toilers. When, recently, he was asked by a coy cub reporter what advice he had to give the younger generation, Marvin Hughitt took thought for a moment. Then he replied: "Why, none...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Death of Hughitt | 1/16/1928 | See Source »

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