Word: ellsworth
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...crushing blow to those who had worked for weeks toward a peaceful solu tion to the feud. With onetime U.S. Am bassador to India Ellsworth Bunker sitting in as moderator, Dutch and Indonesian delegates fortnight ago had sat down in a quiet room at a secluded estate outside Washington, fenced for three days about Indonesia's demand for control of what they call West Irian. But the Dutch still insisted on safeguards for the rights of New Guinea's Papuan native population...
...trouble. Its ill-starred Electra turboprop airliner tarnished the company's name and lost it millions. Its eight-seat JetStar executive plane landed on the market with a thud, and in 1960 Lockheed rode into the red by $43 million. Then last September cancer killed Chairman Robert Ellsworth Gross, 64. who had gambled $40,000 to take over the failing company in 1932. and subsequently gave it not only a place in the sun but also a Constellation. Left to mop up the problems was his shy and schoolmasterly brother. Courtlandt Sherrington Gross, 57. As Lockheed's longtime...
...responsible social decision. None of us, we feel, can effectively or justifiably act as her sister's keeper. Gail Thain '64 Judith Dollenmayer '63 Bay Schleffelin '64 Marcla Tillotson '62 Caroline Herron '62 Cornella Lewls '63 Donna Levine '62 Jill Huston '65 Suzie Stockard '65 Myra Rubin '62 Anne Ellsworth '62 Janie Seligson '64 Barbara Graf...
Shoemaker was an immediate success: in his first season, he rode 219 winners; the next year he tied Joe Culmone for the national title with 388. Though he had ridden many good horses, Willie never got a great one until 1954, when he won the mount on Rex Ellsworth's Swaps. This year he is contracted for two of the best: the colt Crimson Satan and the filly Cicada, each of whom was the two-year-old champion...
...been eased for him, he admits, by trends that began during the Eisenhower Administration-increased U.S. concern for the unaligned Afro-Asian nations, the view that free, non-Communist countries should qualify for aid without having to join military alliances. Of his predecessors. New York Businessman Ellsworth Bunker and Kentucky's U.S. Senator John Sherman Cooper were exceptionally able and well liked, while Chester Bowles, though popular at the time, is now remembered as having tried too hard to woo the Indians. Galbraith has a wider field of effectiveness and is closer to Nehru than either of his immediate...