Word: connor
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...years U.S. chemical journals have discussed the violent and unpredictable explosive qualities of perchloric acid.* But 42-year-old Robert O'Connor did not read chemical journals. As secretary and manager of Los Angeles' O'Connor Electro-Plating Corp. he was chiefly concerned with sales and new business. He was delighted when a dark, bespectacled little man told him about a secret new electrolytic brew compounded of perchloric acid...
...little man's name was Magee-"Doctor" Robert Magee. He said he had a degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He showed O'Connor some samples of aluminum he had treated with his mysterious liquid. O'Connor's eyes bugged. The samples gleamed like silver. O'Connor's business had fallen off after V-J day. But if he could produce a gleaming surface without the expense of buffing and polishing, he could get more orders than he had handled during the war. He hired Magee, enlisted a patent attorney, and prepared...
...Marais '49, Morgan J. Doughton '47, Walter S. Frank '49, John L. Hawk '49, Frederick W. Kinsman '49, William G. Lawrence '50, Mark W. Leiserson '48, Bernard Loitman '40, Donald P. MacDonald '50, William W. Mee '47, James M. Menger, Jr. '48, Vincent P. Moravec '40, William F. O'Connor '49, Berol L. Robinson '48, Abe Schestopol '49, and John M. Teem...
...CONNOR FOUND HOUR LATER BY IVAN SANDROF, 35, TELEGRAM STAFF FEATURE WRITER, FORMER STARS AND STRIPES STAFFER...
...SAME STALLED BUS, SITTING TOO FAR BACK TO SEE, WAS HUSBAND, HENRY P. O'CONNOR. HE GOT HOME FEW MINUTES BEFORE HER. SHE TOLD HIM STORY. "HE WASN'T AT ALL PLEASED ABOUT...