Word: adolph
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...huge Coors advertising balloon floated aloft in the company's home state of Colorado last month, football fans booed in Denver's Mile High Stadium. Reason: for nearly nine months the Adolph Coors Co. brewery, the world's largest, has been the target of an unusual strike and boycott that are supported by a formidable, if somewhat incongruous alliance of activists that includes women's groups, Chicanos, homosexuals and civil libertarians. The issue is not wages but the right of privacy. In fact, the average salary at the company, which has been controlled for three generations...
...when inflation is cranked in. Ninety cents invested in Dow Jones blue chips a dozen years ago is worth only 440 now, a 50% depreciation. Two-thirds of new issues brought to market in the past four years are selling below their offering prices. Shares in Colorado-based brewer Adolph Coors Co. were offered two years ago at $31 each. They now sell for $14, although Coors profits have nearly doubled...
...Adolph W. Samborski '25, former Harvard football coach and athletic director died Thursday at the age of 73 in a York, Maine hospital...
Erlich said that in protesting the institute's invitation, he cited a passage from Rhode's book on Polish history published in 1941, which praised Adolph Hitler for his 1939 decison to invade Poland...
...Times has been the newspaper for competitors to reckon with ever since Adolph Ochs bought it in 1896, 45 years after the paper was founded by a Republican politician and a few months before it would have died of terminal mismanagement. Ochs (which he pronounced ox, its meaning in German), the Cincinnati-born son of German-Jewish immigrants, had at the age of 20 acquired the flagging Chattanooga Times and revived it. He set out to work a similar miracle on Park Row, the Times's home until he moved it north in 1904 to Longacre Square (which city fathers...