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Word: pauls (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Illinois went in for barns, with a dazzling red one by Dale Nichols and another by J. William Kennedy. Superbly banal was Paul Trebilcock's slick portrait study of Mrs. Reginald Vanderbilt in red velvet with her sister Thelma, Viscountess Furness. A rare French influence showed in Split Rock Lighthouse by Minnesota's Eleanor DeLaitre, a yellow lighthouse painted with the vivid shallowness of French Modernist Raoul Dufy. Missouri's John de Martelly offered two ably cartooned old crones in Economic Discussion over coffee & doughnuts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: First National | 6/1/1936 | See Source »

What Ballet Master George Balanchine and his collaborator Paul Tchelitchev offered was the most inept production that present-day operagoers have witnessed on the Metropolitan stage. The bereaved Orpheus was personified by Lew Christensen, a tall, strapping young man from Portland, Ore., who wore black trunks, black mitts, a black cape and a lyre on his back, expressed his sorrow by thrusting his fists into the air, swaying before a funereal mound which could easily have covered scores of Eurydices. Muscular William Dollar, a native of St. Louis, leaped into the picture as Amor (Love), wearing white tights and great...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Travesty on Gluck | 6/1/1936 | See Source »

...will be a wholly informal meeting- simply for the purpose of acquainting you more thoroughly with some of the major subjects which, a week later, will be submitted and officially acted upon at the Stockholders' Meeting in Chicago." Signed to this startling invitation was the name of Walter Paul Paepcke, Container Corp.'s suave, able, young president. Unlike many a chief executive, President Paepcke does not make it a first principle to stay as far away from stockholders as possible. For one thing, he has less reason to make himself scarce. Container Corp. is the biggest maker...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Container Kraft | 6/1/1936 | See Source »

...Paepcke stayed on as president until his young son Walter, four years out of Yale, stepped into his father's shoes in 1921. When Container Corp. was formed, Walter Paepcke became its president at 29. For his executive vice president he had an old-line boxmaker named John Paul Brunt, onetime head of Mid-West Box, which was acquired shortly after the merger...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Container Kraft | 6/1/1936 | See Source »

...railroad fares which are going into effect today. Some of them are: Boston to: Day Coach First Class New York $4.60 $6.90 Washington 10.05 14.60 Atlanta 19.65 33.75 New Orleans 26.35 46.35 Albany 4.05 6.05 Buffalo 9.90 14.85 Pittsburgh 13.40 20.10 Chicago 20.35 30.55 St. Louis 24.20 36.30 St. Paul 28.10 42.10 Denver 41.10 61.60 Los Angeles...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Railroad Rates Go Into Effect Today; Here They Are | 6/1/1936 | See Source »

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