Word: chairmanship
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Oliver P. Bolton '39, chairman of the Freshman Committee, announced the appointment of Bartow Kelly '40 as his successor to the chairmanship. Kelly will be in charge of this committee and Peter M. Pratt '40 will be his assistant. These two will have charge of the rewriting of the Brooks House handbook for incoming Freshmen...
Present members include S. D. Browne '38, Ed Denny '37, E. Grant '39, E. H. Gray '37, Tom Perry '37, Roger Pierce '39, C. W. Stillman '39, E. F. Davis '38, C. C. Daughaday, Jr. '38 assistant chairman and S. Wade '38 Chairman. In addition to this chairmanship there are positions on the Speakers', Information, and Foreign Students' Committees...
...white beard and twinkling eyes. He too plays the flute, but this and his long patronage of music in San Francisco are matters of diversion. For 60 years Mr. Levison's business has been with disaster by land & sea. Fortnight ago he retired from the presidency to the chairmanship of San Francisco's famed Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. Last week its two main subsidiaries confirmed him in the same change of office. Having thus ended 20 years in active management of the second largest marine underwriter in the U. S. and the largest insurance company...
...textiles, in which he made $20,000,000, massive, elegant Myron Charles Taylor went to banking and thence to the chairmanship of U. S. Steel Corp. in 1932. Last fortnight another textile man became a director of U. S. Steel. Almost 20 years younger than Mr. Taylor and still owning an interest in the department store his father owned in Nashville, Tenn., George Arthur Sloan became a U. S. notable in June 1933, when as president of the Cotton-Textile Institute he walked into the White House with the first NRA code ever drafted. His trade association experience later included...
...Work were responsible for making bridge a national frenzy. If any one man was responsible, it was Clifford E, Albert, who was last week rewarded with promotion to the presidency of Cincinnati's snug little U. S. Playing Card Co., succeeding Arthur R. Morgan, who retired to the chairmanship of the executive committee. Cardman Albert devised the bridge broadcast plan, whereby players in the home follow the game in the studio play by play. At one time U. S. Playing Card was promoting bridge in this fashion through 155 stations in the U. S., 15 in Canada. So popular...