Word: emill
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Three weeks later, Sportsmen Clifford Shinn, John Baker and Emil Johnson were flying home to Los Angeles in Shinn's Piper Cub after a Mexican fishing trip. At a point 38 air miles south of the fishing village of San Felipe on Mexico's Gulf of California (190 miles south of the border), Shinn spotted a small plane on the desert. He landed near...
...first Soviet artist of stature to perform in the U.S. since Composer-Pianist Sergei Prokofiev's visit 34 years ago is Emil Gilels, who comes as Soviet Russia's "foremost pianist." Following the "spirit of Geneva," he was admitted to the U.S. as an "official" so that he would not have to be fingerprinted under the McCarran Immigration Act. But his fingers are making an unforgettable impression on U.S. audiences...
...Pianist Emil Gilels headed West for a guest appearance with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the first U.S. performance by a topflight Soviet musician since 1921; Violinist David Oistrakh will come soon for a U.S. concert tour, followed, perhaps, by famed Ballerina Galina Ulanova...
Service Fire President Emil Chervenak (whose company last year paid parent C.I.T. $4,000,000 in dividends on its $2,000,000 capitalization) tried to smooth things over. "We hadn't realized we were so far off and are correcting it," he apologized. "This is a tremendous job because we are a policy factory, and as a result of this we are buried under tons of paper. Our financial competitors are still not doing it." But last week in New York and Oklahoma, the insurance commissions were quietly investigating to see whether their motorists were still being overcharged...
...federal court six months ago on criminal charges of "monopolizing . . . the dissemination of news and advertising" in the Kansas City area (TIME, March 7), the Kansas City Star last week got its punishment. Federal Judge Richard M. Duncan fined the paper $5,000 and also fined Advertising Director Emil A. Sees $2,500 for attempting to monopolize. A companion civil suit, still pending, seeks to force the Star Co. to divorce its radio-TV station, WDAF, from its newspapers and to split up the evening Star and its morning sister, the Times, into two separate papers as far as circulation...