Word: carrolling
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Today everybody expects to live longer. But the man who can give the best longevity estimate, at least for one out of every five Americans, is Carrol Meteer Shanks, president of the Prudential Insurance Co. of America, which has 33.2 million carefully analyzed policyholders. By charting a man's age, background, diseases, job, habits, even his morals, the Pru can chart the odds on the death age down to the last decimal. The Pru's tables show that a male policyholder aged 21 will probably live to be 73 years old, one aged 30 will live...
...Keith. The Great Man is dead. Long live his greatness? Jose Ferrer snoops around tensely, and says no. A tidy film. At the Beacon Hill. Baby Doll doesn't deserve all the publicity but contains three brilliant performances--by Eli Wallach, Karl Malden, and baby-blond newcomer Carrol Baker. Kazan's direction is outstanding, but Tennessee Williams' contributions to the film are weak. In the suburbs. The Rainmaker involves Lancaster, Hepburn (the elder), and drought in a mildly engaging evening. It rains, after a while. At The Saxon...
Strongest proponent of the variable annuity is President Carrol Shanks of Prudential Insurance, second largest U.S. insurance company (which is incorporated in New Jersey). He argued that conventional, old-line annuities have failed to do their job in the past quarter-century, now attract few purchasers. The reason, other supporters point out, is that a purchaser of a guaranteed annuity in 1932 today receives only half its face value in purchasing power. On the other hand, had he been able to buy a variable annuity, he would now receive 245% of the initial amount, more than enough to compensate...
Congressman Carrol Reece, (R-Tenn.) will speak before the Annual Convention of College Young Republican Clubs of New England, Saturday in Sever 11 at 7:30 p.m. The meeting will be closed to the public...
With suggestions of ancient Greece in Boris Aronson's fine setting, with the neighborhood lawyer (J. Carrol Naish) acting as Greek chorus and talking poetically of the Greek and Sicilian past, A View plainly seeks to evoke the drama's great first home of guilty passion and fatal ignorance. But the play, in all this, only emphasizes how little its peasant psychology and hot Sicilian natures have in common with highborn Greek tragedy. Only now and then does there jut up the fated blundering of life, and the pity of it. Far oftener it seems no Furies...