Word: allans
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...accepted similar positions in the New Jersey Exchange, thus branding it as official. Of the Big Board's 1,375 members all but 97 (chiefly inactive members like J. Pierpont Morgan and his son Junius) had applied for Jersey membership before the end of the week. Vice President Allan L. Lindley solemnly posted a notice on the New York floor that his firm's main office was now his home in Englewood...
...Eddy J. Rogers '34 have each had two workouts at that position on "A" team. Francis J. Crane '34 has been at center on all of the practice sessions so far. In all of the scrimmages the backfield has been composed of Harry K. Wells '34 or Allan W. Sherman '34, alternating at quarter, Charles J. Nevin '34 and Arthur J. Barrett '34, halfbacks, and Captain John H. Dean '34, fullback...
...metropolitan photomen had their first inning yesterday afternoon when F. D. R. Jr.'s luggage was trundled into Weld Hall. There is, one must admit, something nauseous about this promptitude, something reminiscent of all the vapid press nonsense which accompanied John Coolidge and Allan Hoover to the Business School in 1929. When Florence Trumbull said that John was not to drive a car, when H. H. crisped the wires to warn Allan against the talkies, a gawpish public moved in. Even in those days it was all very unpleasant. Perhaps those Spanish trunk labels hold little promise after...
Broadway to Hollywood (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer). Five years ago, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer made an expensive musicomedy called The March of Time, decided it was not worth releasing but a shade too good to shelve.* After endless ineffective tinkering, Willard Mack and Edgar Allan Woolf rewrote the story. MGM selected a new cast. Broadway to Hollywood is the result. The few remaining shots from the old film-a technicolor ballet executing a blurred march down an exaggerated stairway-might better have been left out. Based upon the tedious conviction that there is nothing quite eo glamorous as a vaudeville actor...
...shoved the Sim's circulation up to 19,000-largest of any daily in the world -and Ben Day could boast that New Yorkers read the Sun by day, studied the moon by night. Nine years later the Sun fostered another fable-the balloon hoax. It was Edgar Allan Poe's account of a supposed airship flight from England to South Carolina. The hoax lasted for only a day, the Sun itself explaining that the "astounding intelligence" was erroneous...