Word: clinton
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. There at the call of the recovery committees of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers were Owen D. Young (General Electric), Silas Hardy Strawn (U. S. Chamber of Commerce), Henry I. Harriman (U. S. Chamber of Commerce), Clinton Lloyd Bardo (Manufacturers Association), Lewis H. Brown (Johns-Manville), Paul W. Litchfield (Goodyear Tires), Charles Bismark Ames (Texas Corp.), Ernest T. Weir (National Steel), Walter Jodok Kohler (of Kohler), George Harrison Houston (Baldwin Locomotives), Andrew Wells Robertson (Westinghouse) and 79 others. They were all rehearsing to extend the glad hand...
Three of the matches, won by three out of five games, have been played off already. Blan W. Hale '36 defeated James H. Duffy, Jr. '35 by a 3-0 score; Leonard W. Jarcho won 3-1 over Carlisle Abell, and Clinton P. Hill '36 gained a 3-2 victory over Charles McL. Hadley...
...statues in Statuary Hall, but Congress did authorize the relocation of statues. Many a famous pair was separated: Illinois' Frances Willard stays without James Shields; Indiana's Lew Wallace without Oliver P. Morton; Mississippi's Jefferson Davis without James Z. George; New York's Robert Livingston without George Clinton; Wisconsin's Robert M. La Follette without Jacques Marquette. Particularly delicate was the problem in the case of Rhode Island and Virginia. Eventually Nathanael Greene and George Washington were moved out of Statuary Hall; Roger Williams and Robert E. Lee remained behind. California has not made up its mind which...
...were the famed voices of industry heard at the Congress of American Industry. Schwab of Bethlehem Steel, Atterbury of Pennsylvania Railroad, Swope of General Electric, Sloan of General Motors, Gifford of A. T. & T., Avery of Montgomery Ward were not even among those present. But genial, white-thatched Clinton Lloyd Bardo, who resigned month ago as president of New York Shipbuilding Corp., was there to uphold the position of tycoons...
...Michigan (which had graduated him in 1882) and threw in a graceful white building to house them. The collection includes 50,000 documents of the Earl of Shelburne, British Prime Minister at the end of the American revolution; 25,000 documents and 350 hand-made maps of Sir Henry Clinton comprising the actual British Headquarters Papers; 15 folio manuscript volumes of Lord Germain, British Colonial Secretary; and the official files of General Thomas Gage, British Commander-in-Chief, probably the most important bundle of manuscript that ever crossed the Atlantic. Some "items": Burgoyne's and Cornwallis' letters reporting...