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...meantime Prisoner Hauptmann, never a churchman, has acquired a "spiritual adviser" in the person of one Rev. D. G. Werner from Manhattan. Under the calming influence of this Lutheran divine, Bruno Richard Hauptmann has seen four of his fellow prisoners go to death in the electric chair, the fate to which he was sentenced by a Justice of the State's Supreme Court (TIME...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: Appeal at Trenton | 7/1/1935 | See Source »

Some Chicagoans still think that President Hutchins' manner has hurt the University, that the town might have done more for the gown during Depression if he had been a bit more mellow. Friends and philosophers, however, are glad that Bob Hutchins has escaped the fate which Critic Carl Van Doren ascribes to Author Christopher Morley: "He got mellow before he got ripe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Midway Man | 6/24/1935 | See Source »

...week, with the U. S. publication of "Robert Francis' " The Wolf at the Door (original title: La Grange aux Trois Belles). As different as could be from such trail-blazing contemporaries as Louis-Ferdinand Celine (Journey to the End of the Night) and Andre Malraux (Man's Fate), "Robert Francis" (real name: Jean Godmé) follows his romantic bypath in the footsteps of Alain Fournier, Charles Dickens and Hans Christian Andersen. Critics will note a long gap between Author Francis and the men he trails, but readers who are sick & tired of painful realism may well find surcease...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: In Flanders Fey | 6/24/1935 | See Source »

Anti-climactic though its wind-up was, the Court had amply justified the predictions of those who foresaw that the fate of the New Deal depended more on nine old men in black than on the 531 members of Congress (TIME, Nov. 26). When the nine Justices folded their black robes about them and marched out of their dark semicircular courtroom last week, a long and important chapter in Supreme Court history had come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JUDICIARY: New Home, New Hope | 6/10/1935 | See Source »

Least concerned of all U. S. journalists over the fate of NRA was the country's most famed editor, Arthur Brisbane, who now runs Hearst's tabloid New York Daily Mirror. While his neighbor Daily News was filling every editorial page for a week with angry philippics and cartoons against the Supreme Court, Editor Brisbane happily buried NRA with a scant half-column editorial. Then he got down to subjects much nearer his soft old heart -babies and gorillas. In a resounding editorial on the Dionne quintuplets' first birthday, he pointed the inevitable Brisbanal moral...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Eagle to Gorilla | 6/10/1935 | See Source »

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