Word: clinton
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Dewing, professor of Finance, the course in "Corporation Finance" will not be given this year. In its place, a course in "Financial Management" will be offered, with Thomas H. Sanders, professor of Accounting, lecturing on the interpretation of financial statements during the first half-year. In the second term, Clinton P. Biddle, professor of Investment Banking, and William L. Crum, professor of Economics, will take up the financial problems of corporations...
Died. George Clinton Ward, 70, old-time railroader, president of Southern California Edison Co.; of pneumonia; in Los Angeles...
...polished floor to the liner's bar, he would be of age, and no more damned guardians. * * * John was cutting cordwood when the postman drove up and rattled at the tin mailbox by the road. "H'lo John" the postman sang out. How d' ye make out?" "Dandy Mr. Clinton. They gave me a scholarship and the state Harvard Club promised to fix things if I get stuck. I got a job for my meals, and I guess I can get by on four hundred hard money." "Wull, good luck John," Mr. Clinton wished as his car rattled away: John...
...Though New York Shipbuilding founders' shares soared from $2 to $20 a share this year, Lou Manning denied any open market operations. Chairman William Mowat Flook stepped down to vice chairman to make way for Mr. Cord and Lou Manning became chairman of the executive committee. Venerable President Clinton Lloyd Bardo stayed on to build the ships. Andrew William Mellon founded New York Shipbuilding in 1899 (see p. 47). Astute, he sold it out at the height of the Wartime shipbuilding boom. After the War when marine construction dwindled almost to nil, it branched into electrical equipment under license...
Meanwhile the Mallorcan authorities decided that, having collected 20,000 pesetas bail from two prisoners, they might as well release the other three, Edmund Blodgett, Roderick Mead and Mrs. Lockwood's husband Clinton. Judge Vidal collected the five passports, ordered the bailed-out Americans to report daily to him, lest they leave Mallorca. In Madrid diplomatic compliments were exchanged between Ambassador Bowers and Premier Azana who promised ''expeditious conclusion" of the trial. It was expected to end in sentences of imprisonment so short that the five U. S. citizens can be declared to have served their time...