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William K. Wyant, Jr., Atlanta, Ga.; William T. Dean, Jr., Chicago, III; Charles F. Haas, Chicago, III.; Sol R. Srole, Chicago, III.; Howard F. Schomer, Oak Park, III.; John H. Sardeson, Oak Park, III.; Robert Kramer, Jr., Davenport, Ia.; Robert A. Stewart, Jr., Independence, Ia.; John R. Yungblut, Dayton, Ky.; Irving M. Pinansky, Portland, Me.; Thomas S. Risley, Waterville, Me.; Cesar L. Barber, Bethesda, Md.; Louis H. Conger, Jr., Muskegon, Mich.; Lazar M. Paves, Detroit, Mich.; Joseph H. Phillips, Dearborn, Mich...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CORPORATION VOTES 65 STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS | 11/2/1934 | See Source »

...Lawson which the Group Theater has chosen as its second play of the current season. Forcefully conceived and superbly constructed, it tells the story of a Russian Jew in his struggle for power and self expression. Cursed with a driving ambition, an unlimited imagination, and a suppressed poetic fervor, Sol Ginsburg rises ruthlessly to the domination of a great business firm. This mad search for power drives Sol from his love for Sarah Glassman; his restless soul is never satisfied; his confused ideals and desires lead him on in unceasing search for anything which seems inaccessible to him. Having achieved...

Author: By S. M. B., | Title: The Crimson Bookshelf | 11/1/1934 | See Source »

Peck's Bad Boy (Sol Lesser). Sure of pleasing the Legion of Decency and that large portion of the cinema public which considers Jackie Cooper's pout irresistibly affecting, Producer Sol Lesser quite properly thought it unnecessary to make this picture a faithful transcription of its original. Admirers of George Wilbur Peck's 1883 classic may therefore be disappointed to find it projected upon the screen as an up-to-date tearjerker, in which young Bill Peck experiences every childhood misery known to Hollywood, from a cuff on the ear to forced separation from his mongrel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Oct. 15, 1934 | 10/15/1934 | See Source »

...producers from raiding their rivals' star performers with offers of higher salaries. When cinema companies began going bankrupt, Hollywood ceased to brag of its wage scale and cinema employes began to take unusual pains to get their Federal income tax returns just right. Last week, NRA Division Administrator Sol Arian Rosenblatt, able Broadway lawyer, made his long-awaited report on stars and salaries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Stars and Salaries | 7/30/1934 | See Source »

...boarding house. The shooting of Horst Wessel by four Communists occurred in 1930 before Hitler's rise to power and the confessed No. 1 shooter died in jail, but Nazis, bent on winding up the case in their own way, insisted on trying last week three more Communists-Sol Epstein, Hans Ziegler and Peter Stoll (TIME, May 14). "I wouldn't kill a fly!" cried Defendant Stoll. "Oh, no!" snorted the judge. "But you could stand guard while a man was being murdered!" Convicted of standing outside Frau Salm's boarding house, Herr Stoll was sentenced...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Horst Wessel Windup | 6/25/1934 | See Source »

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