Word: modelings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...paid our men $3,500 in wages. We are putting $4,500 in the bank to go toward other creative work in which these men will share. We made something out of nothing and gave pleasure and confidence during a time of fear and criticism. . . . A nude model in an atelier [was] only a small incident in creating the scene...
...Partisans, it looked like the long-awaited "break" by ambitious young Mr. Roosevelt. He was indignantly accused of "slurring" the Court's high character. Two Republican ex-Governors of New York (Whitman and Miller) were publicly amazed and shocked. Paul Drennan Cravath, whose person might have been the model for Cartoonist Rollin Kirby's personification of the G. O. P., was sure all decent lawyers would "resent" the statement. President Hoover at Indianapolis thundered...
...department of doll architecture is not only able but eager to make any tycoon's child happy with an exact model of her own home, working either from photographs or plans. Prices, they promise, will not be exorbitant. Unemployed draughtsmen and department stores are not the only people to benefit. Frames for the doll houses are made at Greenwich House Workshops, a semi-charitable institution to teach handiwork to New York children. Each doll house bears a Delano & Aldrich label, is a fine advertisement for the firm...
...will represent the University next Sunday, November 13, at 2.30 o'clock at the first meeting this year of the Executive Committee of the New England Model League of Nations, to be held in Jordan House, Smith College, Northampton. W. S. Salant '33, chairman of the Harvard delegation, and representative last year in the French group at the meeting of the league, and M. A. Hoffman '34, who served as chairman of the Siamese delegation last year, are the men who will participate at the committee meeting this week...
Automobile production last week sank to 12,000 units. In Detroit everybody knew that the big producers, their selling season over, were laying 1933 plans. Usually model and price changes are announced at the New York Automobile Show. But last week Walter P. Chrysler jumped the gun and stated that his Plymouth was withdrawing from the four-cylinder field, would come out as a six to sell below the present $700 base price of the four. "The best evidence of confidence we can give" was the way he referred to the $10,000,000 which Chrysler Corp. has spent...