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Forrest R. Snyder, O. Cousens, S. W. Crocker, Elliott W. Robbins, James D. Reiher, Harriet Cooms, Joan Stoddard, J. P. Reisman, Eleanor Packard, William Ray, G. Louise, Robert H. Walker, Arky deRosset, H. G. White, A. P. Felton, Catherine E. Jodoin, J. McClellan Laughin, Marguerite Walsh, Kenneth G. Cloby, D. Armstrong, Barbara Cobb, Barbara Cox, Robert' A. Sard, Henry P. Walker, Jr., John Mitchell, Jane Hawkes, Augusta Flagg, Fonchen Usher, William W. Lord, Jane Gilman, Helena Niescherg, Winston J. Rowe, William Dennis, Miss H. Randal, Erik Lundberg, Franklin C. Forbes, L. A. Vigneras, G. Fuler, Willys Spencer, Peggy Moss Priscilla...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OVER 150 ATTEND DANCE AT CRIMSON | 8/1/1933 | See Source »

...Alvan Macauley, president of Packard Motor Car Co., was in Manhattan last week, wanted to go home. The weather was stifling. He called up American Airways which had lately opened New York-Chicago service via Detroit with 15-passenger Curtiss Condors. What was that? . . . All space taken. Why, that couldn't be possible; well, how about tomorrow? . .. Sorry, all booked up for four days ahead. . . . What? Well, let me know if somebody cancels his reservation. What's that? . . . Sorry, Mr. Macauley, we have a waiting list of 30 already. . . . Disgruntled, Mr. Macauley took the train. ¶ With seven...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Waiting Lists | 7/10/1933 | See Source »

Died. Dr. John Grier Hibben, 72, president-emeritus of Princeton University; of internal hemorrhages when he drove his Packard sedan (given him by Princeton's trustees upon his retirement last June) into a Chevrolet beer truck near Woodbridge, N. J. His wife, 70, riding in the back seat, sustained a fractured skull and facial cuts from her smashed eyeglasses. Police thought Dr. Hibben must have suffered a stroke or fainted at the wheel before the crash. Born in Peoria. Ill., son of a minister, he was graduated with honors by Princeton in 1882, Princeton Theological Seminary in 1886 (after...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 29, 1933 | 5/29/1933 | See Source »

...Steel and Charles Steele of J. P. Morgan) did not enter the board room until he led the way, always greeted him with "How do you do, Mr. President?", did not smoke at meetings. (He smoked cigars only on proper occasions, sometimes a pipe while riding in his Packard.) In Chicago, his headquarters, he lived modestly in a 20-year-old apartment building. No. 199 Lake Shore Drive (where the Insulls lived years ago), walked down every morning to his office on Jackson Boulevard, lunched daily at the exclusive Chicago Club at what used to be known as the Railroad...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Retirements | 5/15/1933 | See Source »

...calls "the children's hour between the dark and the daylight'' when his staff assembles at his desk to dispatch departmental business before going home. Dr. Moley lives with Mr. Mullen at the Carlton Hotel, three squares from his office. He drives a sleek new Packard roadster. He takes no exercise, plays no golf, says: "I know of no scientific proof that all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." Mrs. Moley and the twins have been in Santa Barbara since September, will probably remain there until au- tumn. Dr. Moley likes to exhibit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Couch & Coach | 5/8/1933 | See Source »

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