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...Atlanta, Ga., Negro Jeff Davis was shot in the stomach, complained of the pain. Physicians decided to operate. Before they found the bullet they were seeking, they found four other, old ones...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miscellany, Apr. 20, 1931 | 4/20/1931 | See Source »

...that 80% of our graduates are pursuing the line of work in which they were trained." Graduates whom his Institute views with satisfaction include: William Henry Holtzclaw (born in Roanoke, Ala.), founder and principal of Utica Normal and Industrial School at Utica, Miss.; James G. Carter (born in Brunswick, Ga.), U. S. Consul in Calais, France; C. C. Alleyne (born in the West Indies), Bishop of the New York district of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church; Thomas M. Campbell, who received last January one of the Harmon awards ($400 and a gold medal) in Farming & Rural Life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Golden Tuskegee | 4/20/1931 | See Source »

...Manhattan last week, Benjamin F. Hubert, colored president of the State Industrial College for Negroes (Savannah, Ga.), pleaded with unemployed Harlem Negroes to come back home. He pictured the South as a Land of Canaan. He assured Harlem that racial disagreement was a thing of the past in the South, told of eating with white folk in Atlanta hotels, speaking before the Legislature. Mourned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RACES: Land of Canaan? | 4/6/1931 | See Source »

...Wisconsin Supreme Court fortnight ago ruled that a headline may not be made the basis of a libel action unless it is libelous of itself, apart from the accompanying story (TIME, March 23). Last week substantially the same question was argued in Macon, Ga. in a libel case brought against the Macon News by a Professor William Joseph Bradley of Mercer University...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: What Headlines May Say (Cont'd.) | 4/6/1931 | See Source »

...Santiago, Chile, firm of Brusadelli & Manni, suing General Motors Acceptance Corp. for having called them bankrupt, last week had genial Lory K. Bethune, Chilean manager for General Motors, jailed for "interrogation." Mr. Bethune, of Atlanta, Ga., was held incommunicado, denied counsel. It required two heated notes from U. S. Ambassador William Smith Culbertson to get him out of jail. Subsequently Mariano Puga Vega, a lawyer for General Motors, challenged the chief attorney for Brusadelli & Manni to a duel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine, Mar. 30, 1931 | 3/30/1931 | See Source »

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