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...Legislature did not go home, however, before its Democratic members had had some fun bedeviling the Republican nominee, called the nation's attention to a few facts about Kansas. Most fun was had by Joe McDonald of Kansas City, blond, high-spirited Democratic leader of the Senate who lately journeyed to Washington to be coached for this occasion by shrewd Democratic Press agent Charles ("Smear Hoover") Michelson. Roaring with laughter and shouting across the chamber as he made his points, Senator McDonald gleefully recalled Nominee Landon's message to the Republican Convention proposing extension of Federal civil service...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: KANSAS: Security & Service | 7/20/1936 | See Source »

...company will be largely owned by the old London firm and young Banker Rockefeller, who went into Schroder's Manhattan affiliate not long after he left Yale. Blond, wiry, aggressive. Banker Rockefeller will hold down a vice presidency in his new firm. Another vice president will be his old colleague, Gerald E. ("Jerry"') Donovan. The presidency will go to Carlton P. Fuller, oldtime Schroder official...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Schroder Rockefeller | 7/20/1936 | See Source »

...milers as they jogged around Princeton's sun-baked track in the first lap of the Amateur Athletic Union's 1,500-metre championship run. Suddenly a tiny group intent on the pole vault let out a roar. What had happened, spectator asked spectator? A husky, blond San Franciscan by the name of George Varoff, they learned, had just twisted over the bar at the incredible height of 14 ft., 6½ in. By the time the crowd leaned back again on Palmer Stadium's uncomfortable cement seats, the 1,.500-metre race was over. First...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Records at Princeton | 7/13/1936 | See Source »

...Under the mellow brick walls of St. James's Palace the blond, horsy young Duke of Norfolk, Earl Marshal of England, led a gaudy procession to a scarlet-draped balcony. The silver trumpets of the Horse Guards blew a fanfare, then up stepped Sir Gerald Woods Wollaston, Garter Principal King of Arms, looking like a very expensive Jack of Clubs in his stiff gold-embroidered tabard, and began to read from a long parchment scroll. All the world could hear him, for microphones were concealed in the balcony rail. The first sentence lasted twelve minutes without a period. Excerpts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: Crown's Week | 6/8/1936 | See Source »

...business since the proxy fight with Boxmaker Brunt, President Paepcke says, "It's gone along nicely." Blond, athletic, Habsburg-handsome, he lives with his wife and three daughters on Chicago's Lake Shore Drive, weekends at his 600-acre farm on Somonauk Creek outside of Chicago. Mrs. Elizabeth Nitze Paepcke goes in for stage designing for Junior League plays...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Container Kraft | 6/1/1936 | See Source »

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