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...Manhattan's U.S. Plywood Corp. (annual sales: $541,349,000) and Hamilton, Ohio's Champion Papers Inc. ($456,313,000) announced a merger that, with normal growth, should easily create a new member of the club. With stockholders' approval, Champion Papers President and Chairman Karl R. Bendetsen, 58, and U.S. Plywood President Gene C. Brewer, 52, will head the new family tree-to be known as U.S. Plywood-Champion Papers, Inc.-as chairman and president...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mergers: Bid for New Membership | 9/9/1966 | See Source »

...Project of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund Inc. of New York. Co-signers of the Defense Report: Investment Banker Frank Altschul, vice president, Council on Foreign Relations; General (ret.) Frederick L. Anderson, commander of the Eighth Bomber Command in World War II; onetime Assistant Secretary of the Army Karl R. Bendetsen; President Detlev W. Bronk of the National Academy of Sciences; former Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Gordon Dean; Physicist James B. Fisk of Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc.; Investment Banker Bradley Gaylord; Lawyer Roswell L. Gilpatric, former Under Secretary of the Air Force; Investment Banker Townsend W. Hoopes; Johns Hopkins Administrative Officer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE USSR's CHALLENGE: Rockefeller Report Calls for Better Military Setup, Sustained Will | 1/13/1958 | See Source »

Harry Truman, hopping mad, said in effect that the brotherhoods had broken their word, and reacted as Kennedy and Hughes had anticipated. The President seized the railroads; Assistant Secretary of the Army Karl Bendetsen was put in charge. Management, not the Government, would continue to manage the roads. But Kennedy and Hughes obviously expected that now they would eventually get what they wanted. In a Washington hotel suite, Will Kennedy pumped Boss Hughes's hand and crowed: "A tremendous victory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: A Tremendous Victory | 9/4/1950 | See Source »

...Bendetsen, with a Stanford law degree, a reserve lieutenancy and an interest in radio and aviation, was practicing law in his Aberdeen, Wash, hometown in 1939 when the Judge Advocate General's Department called him. There, as captain, he helped draft the Selective Service and Soldiers' & Sailors' Relief Acts. Promoted to major, he prepared the War Department's legal steps for taking over two striking airplane plants, organized the alien and war prisoner division of the Provost Marshal General's Office. Later, a lieutenant colonel, he prepared Franklin Roosevelt's executive order that last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ALIENS: Medal for Moving | 11/30/1942 | See Source »

This week Colonel Bendetsen got an unexpected, embarrassing sequel to the Japanese migration: when a young Japanese-American citizen violated curfew regulations, Portland's Federal Judge James Alger Fee ruled that the curfew law covered aliens only, that General DeWitt had no power over citizens. The reason: martial law had never been declared, was merely assumed. Possible results: 1) declaration of martial law on the Pacific Coast; 2) increased difficulty in enforcing dimouts, etc.; 3) court action by citizen Japanese who may construe from Judge Fee's ruling that they are illegally kept in camps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ALIENS: Medal for Moving | 11/30/1942 | See Source »

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