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...name Holbein in the Anglo-Saxon world immediately suggests the chunky, bearded younger Hans, favorite portraitist of Henry VIII and immortalizer of Tudor aristocracy. Actually there were four famed German Holbeins: Hans the father, Uncle Sigismund, Brothers Hans and Ambrosius. All of them were famed painters, would have left a deep mark on the history of painting if young Hans had never thought of going to England...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Handy Holbein | 10/5/1936 | See Source »

...resent the implication that a name like Goldblatt will per se besmirch the beauty of State St., and dip its standards into the mud. I would like to point out to you gentlemen of limitless knowledge and particularly to your erudite Chicago editorial staff that such distinguished Anglo-Saxon and Norman names as Marshall Field and Carson, Pine Scott & Co.. rather than symbolizing State St., Chicago, have long stood and do stand forlornly alone amid the non-Aryan hosts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Sep. 28, 1936 | 9/28/1936 | See Source »

Under Yale Economist Olin Glenn Saxon, the Research Division was digging up the New Deal's past, present & future, grinding out scores of handbooks, pamphlets, leaflets, dodgers chiefly devoted to broken promises and taxes (TIME, Sept. 14). Within it nestled a special Landon speechwriting group, membership unrevealed. But busy at headquarters were Nominee Landon's onetime personal researchers, Charles Phelps Taft II, Earl Howard Taylor, Ralph West Robey, who were transferred from Topeka when the press spotlighted them as a Landon brain trust (TIME...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: REPUBLICANS: Slump to Fight | 9/21/1936 | See Source »

...plans of President Dunster and his collaborators reveal clearly what the university tradition meant to the Anglo-Saxon world of the seventeenth century. Harvard's founders insisted on the "collegiate way of living," thus recognizing the importance of student life. They knew the educational values which arise from the daily intercourse between individual students and between student and tutor. Their concept of professional training was, to be sure, largely cast in terms of the ministry, but they envisaged also training in the law and medicine. The liberal arts educational tradition they transplanted in toto from the colleges which they...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TERCENTENARY ORATION | 9/18/1936 | See Source »

...academic corps of fact & figure men working in Washington under Yale Economist Olin G. Saxon completes the Intelligence Division with which Nominee Landon is moving into his campaign. Republicans who have long sneered at the Roosevelt "brain trust" may be spared some embarrassment by their nominee's tactful word-juggling in referring to his helpers, but the fact remains that he, no less than Franklin Roosevelt in 1932, has been compelled to acknowledge that a Presidential program for the modern U. S. must be the product of many minds. With no other statement in You And I-And Roosevelt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Middle-of-the-Roader | 8/3/1936 | See Source »

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