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...aggression and one was fighting such a war last week; but they successfully ignored the United States of Brazil, which is larger than the 48 United States. Suddenly the Chinese Delegation asked (and were refused) permission to set up loudspeakers and let the Conference hear a broadcast of Japanese battleships bombarding Shanghai. Thus China, the most populous country in the world was rebuffed. And of the Big Seven themselves least attention was paid to Russia, largest country in the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: No More Poison Gas! | 2/22/1932 | See Source »

Every winter Manhattan's Metropolitan Opera Company commandeers its best German singers, puts on with great success a series of Wagner matinees. This year for the first time an act from each opera in the cycle is being broadcast. On the stage last week Soprano Maria Jeritza, making her farewell appearance of the season, sang the gracious Elizabeth who pleads for the erring Tannhauser. Backstage in her dressing-room her godson, one Jonathan Rinehart, 2, became involved with her make-up boxes, completely daubed himself with eyebrow-pencil, lipstick, rouge. After the performance, when Signor & Signora Gatti-Cazzaza and many...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Black Brothers | 2/22/1932 | See Source »

Though there is likely to be a disposition among many citizens to admire the boldness and promptness with which President Lowell of Harvard has broadcast his views in favor of the concurrence of the United States with the League of Nations in a boycott upon Japan, we think that the average American opinion will be that Dr. Lowell's admonition should have been broadcast over European lines rather than over American. The Government of the United States has put plainly on record its disapproval of what is in reality an aggressive war on China by Japan. It has founded...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESS | 2/19/1932 | See Source »

...himself who could feel proud. In his honor some 2,000 Columbia alumni from far & near traveled to Manhattan to gather in the Waldorf-Astoria for the largest dinner they or the hotel had ever given. It was the fourth annual "Round-the-World-Columbia Night." broadcast this time over 81 U. S. stations and to the rest of the world over two short-wave stations. Similar dinners were also taking place in Paris, London, Berlin, Geneva, Mexico City, Havana, Moscow, Manila. Aboard the 5. 5. Resolute off Bombay, and the S. S. Reliance in the West Indies were more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Morningside's Miracle | 2/15/1932 | See Source »

...Supreme Court, Cabinet members, foreign diplomats and invited celebrities. Following his address, the President will march out to the east steps of the Capitol to lead the singing of "America" by 10,000 massed voices accompanied by three bands and conducted by Walter Damrosch. The composite result will be broadcast. There will be afternoon exercises at the Washington monument, a ball in the evening for which the costumes were designed by one Anne Washington. Once under way, the Bicentennial celebration will be the occasion for protracted and unprecedented patriotic adulation, artistic and otherwise...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Business of a Bicentennial | 2/15/1932 | See Source »

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