Word: forde
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...days ago my friend, the British Consul General in Rabat, and I went to Casablanca to meet some of our California friends, who were cruising on the Stella Polaris. We had made all sorts of arrangements for their brief stay in Morocco. On greeting Bernard Ford, one of the Pacific Coast's leading investment brokers, we asked him to choose between a flying trip to Marrakech or a motor excursion to Rabat. He answered: "Look here, before anything else let me go to a newsstand. I want to get the TIME copies I've missed since we left...
Busfield, Bernard Lawrence of 1359 Edwards Avenue, Lakewood; Lakewood High. Cook, William Thomas of 1314 Belle Avenue, Lakewood; Lakewood High. Duback, Richard Thomas of 2789 West 16th Street, Cleveland; Lincoln High, Cleveland. Klima, Edward Stephan of 7010 Southfield Avenue, Cleveland; James Ford Rhodes High, Cleveland...
Robert J. Fahey of 3 Essex Rd., Belmont; Belmont High. Chester V. Ford, Jr., of 23 Aberdeen St., Boston; Boston Public Latin. James H. Freeman of Willbraham Academy, Wilbraham; Wilbraham Academy. Paul Fruit of 28 Ransom Rd., Brighton; Boston Public Latin. Sumner J. P. Germain of 48 Sewall St., Lynn; English High, Lynn. Thomas J. Gill of 159 Chestnut Ave., Boston; Boston Public Latin...
Roswell (pop. 25,000) was a sleepy little cow town when Hurd was a kid. He left it for two happy but unbrilliant years at West Point, later spent five years with the late Illustrator N.C. Wyeth, at Chadds Ford, Pa., learning to paint. Hurd married Wyeth's artist daughter Henriette, then moved back to New Mexico, where the Kurds and their three children have taken joyfully to ranch life. Says Hurd, who has gone on painting junkets to Egypt, Hawaii, Nigeria, India, England, Italy, Brazil and Morocco: "It just happens that this part of the planet is where...
...group to appear among the big names were automobile dealers; at least ten appeared with incomes above $75,000. Springfield, Ill.'s Chevrolet Dealer E. W. Bates ($192,784) earned more than General Motors President Charles E. Wilson ($166,100) and almost as much as Ford Motor Co.'s President Henry Ford II ($200,000). Actually, the list was not a true measure of those with the biggest incomes-as usual, no dividends, royalties or capital gains were included...