Word: artificiales
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Warburg. To the directors of Manhattan Co. and its banking units, last week Paul Moritz Warburg presented his views. For having denounced the speculative orgy of 1929 and predicting its inevitable end (TIME, May 19), shrewd Banker Warburg gained a reputation as a good prophet, has not lost it by...
After the war Professor Lowe made a few captive balloon ascensions at New York and Philadelphia, but they were financial failures. Then he gave up the business, sold his apparatus to the Brazilian government. In 1867 he received patents for a process of making artificial ice. Later he achieved fame...
Followers of the dance were fairly dizzy last week over the importance of an event in Manhattan. Their enthusiasm invaded the smartcharts and artcharts until lay men also began to feel that they owed it to their development to see the German dancer, Mary Wigman. The house sold out for...
That amiable greybeard Prime Minister Theodore Steeg lost three members from his already enfeebled ministry last week,* but guaranteed the life of his government for at least three weeks by adjourning Parliament until the second Tuesday in January, the fateful 13th. The political spot-light shifted from the Chamber of...
A man who knows how to make a good saw and who was Wartime purchaser of helmets and armor for the U. S. Government, watched the construction of one of the world's strangest buildings last week in Fitchburg, Mass. He was Alvan Tracy Simonds, president since 1913 of...