Word: coulter
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...letters I get from home," wrote People's New York Correspondent Len Coulter, "reveal that thousands of people in Britain have swallowed the old bunk about the American Way of Life-swish homes, big cars, gleaming refrigerators, 21-inch TV sets and plenty of money in the bank. Phooey...
...spent more on highways alone than the entire value of Norway's economy; its new homes were worth more than the entire economy of Spain, its new cars more than the combined economies of Mexico, Denmark and Australia. Surveying their bounty, Americans could say with President Thomas Coulter of Chicago's Association of Commerce and Industry: "We've never had it so good...
...great private fortunes is gone. People no longer can give only money to community projects-they must give themselves." So says Thomas H. Coulter, head of Chicago's Association of Commerce and Industry. With this, most U.S. businessmen are in full agreement. While civic-minded executives and their companies still write generous checks (last year corporate donations of $100 and up totaled 40% of Community Chest donations, 34% of United Fund contributions), many businessmen are not content to discharge their public responsibilities with cash alone. Instead, more and more executives are donating time and talent to civic projects, from...
...Jersey: George Feifer of Eliot and Passaic; Geoffrey Gaulkin of Lowell and Essex Falls; and Joseph L. Steinberg of Kirkland and Paissaic; New York: Robert A. Alpern of Adams and New York; Robert W. Colman of Adams and Neponsit; James A. Coulter of Brooklyn; Paul A. David of Adams and New York; David M. Dorsen of Lowell and New York; David A. Goldstein of Lowell and Jamaica Estates; James M. Murphy of Eliot and New York; Peter D. Noerdlinger of Adams and New York; and Steven J. Schneider of Kirkland and Great Neck...
Such happenstance methods of food manufacture, paralleled in the discoveries of other famous cheeses, have long been a challenge to modern scientific planners. At a meeting of the Illinois Dairy Products Association in Chicago, Professor Samuel T. Coulter, of the University of Minnesota's division of dairy husbandry, announced a brand new species of American cheese, sterile-fresh from the laboratory. Its name: nuworld cheese, "the first new cheese," according to Professor Coulter, "in modern times...