Word: sidney
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Last year Cartoonist Goldberg was invited to leave his artistic retirement, continue the late Sidney Smith's Andy Gump for the New York News-Chicago Tribune syndicate. Comic Artist Goldberg was vexed at the idea of drawing another cartoonist's characters. Next thing the trade knew, Rube Goldberg was working up a new feature whose principal character, a fat female clown, was christened Lala Palooza after consultation with Yale's Pundit William Lyon Phelps. By last week, with 75 papers signed up* by a new syndicate headed by Frank Jay Markey, it was evident that editors expected...
...Museum. Brother Arthur retired last year to the life he preferred in France. Dignified, cultured Walter Sachs, a Harvard classmate of Franklin D. Roosevelt has only one family partner, Howard Sachs, a son of Founder Sachs's Brother Harry. The others are Henry Bowers, Ernest Loveman, and Sidney Weinberg, who is the most active partner today...
Paul G. Bamberg '38, Mattapan; Elliott Bresnick '39, Dorchester; Ira Chart '37, Dorchester; Louis J. Dunham, Jr. '39, Dorchester; Stanley S. Kanter '38, Mattapan; Philip Levine '39, Dorchester; Bernard A. Orkin '38, Dorchester; Harry Pollard '39, Dorchester; Melvin Richter '37, Dorchester; Sidney Sulkin '39, Dorchester; Theodore H. White '38, Dorchester; and Charles Zibbell '38, Dorchester...
...Dead End and Pulitzer Prizewinning Men in White, Sidney Kingsley was given more credit for the validity and sincerity of his dramatic ideas than for his way of handling the tools of his craft. In Ten Million Ghosts this discrepancy is even wider. The characters move in an atmosphere of unreality. Verified facts are blurted so awkwardly that they assume a cloak of incredibility. Furthermore, most spectators will agree that the thesis that armament makers are the sole cause of war is too old and battered for adult consideration. Best feature of Ten Million Ghosts is the settings-particularly...
Meantime brave assurances issued from the Schencks that their deal was still on, but reports of Scot Maxwell's resurgence became so hot that Joe Schenck dispatched Twentieth Century-Fox's President, Sidney R. Kent, to London to keep his ear to the ground, his hand on a transatlantic telephone. Fortnight ago, Mr. Kent was suddenly invited to Mr. Maxwell's office in Golden Square off London's Regent Street. If Twentieth Century-Fox would prefer it, said blunt Mr. Maxwell, he would be happy that they should retain their 49% interest in the Gaumont-British...