Word: forded
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...week he tossed Oxford University another $6,500,000. He gave $1,000,000 for more medical research, $500,000 to buy a site for a new school of physical chemistry, $5,000,000 for a new college for social studies. Thereupon, the onetime bicycle mechanic, now the Henry Ford of Great Britain, who has given $55,000,000 to British education and charity and still has some $100,000,000 left, announced he would give no more. Giving, said he, "is very nice," but each fresh benefaction brings him 300 begging letters daily. Complained Lord Nuffield: "It has caused...
...weeks' report); American Light & Traction from $5,368,893 to $5,919,580; Westinghouse Air Brake from $1,153,091 to $1,846,833; Electric Bond & Share from $2,431,460 to $2.571,601; American Chicle from $831.281 to $1,022,665; Libbey-Owens-Ford up from $2,266,988 to $3,216,690. For the first nine months Libbey-Owens was nearly $1,500,000 above last year's $7,369,960. An old market standby, American Telephone & Telegraph reported that in the fiscal year ending Aug. 31 earnings were up from...
Great credit is due the Theatrical Collection for assembling this timely exhibition. The play has been given very few times and only at the "Old Vic" in London and at Start ford-on-Avon has it been repeated often. For this reason it was very difficult to gather together enough play bills and pictures to present such a sizable exhibit...
...Fletcher Chace '38, Frederic C. Church '20, Forrester A. Clark '38, John R. Clark '38, Laurence Curtis '16, Roger W. Cutler '11, John H. Dean '34, F. Stanton Deland '36, Charles Devens '32, Henry T. Dunker '25, Samuel M. Felton, 3rd '13, W. Cameron Forbes '92, George S. Ford '37, James J. Gaffney '37, William F. Garcelon '95, G. Peabody Gardner, Jr. '10, Robert H. Hallowell '96, Huntington R. Hardwick '15, S. Trafford Hicks, Jr. '38, Charles G. Hutter, Jr. '38, Delmar Leighton '19, T.. Ferguson Locke '38, Frederick R. Moseley, Jr. '36, Alexander C. Northrop, Jr. '38, George...
Moreover, every one of C. I. O.'s five councilmanic candidates remained in the running. Maurice Sugar, U. A. W.'s attorney, placed seventh with 88,000. Richard Frankensteen, U. A. W.,'s assistant president and hero of the "Battle of the Overpass" at the Ford plant, was ninth with 83,000. Thirteenth was Tracy Doll, president of U. A. W.'s Hudson local, followed in 14th place by Walter Reuther, head of the big, tough West Side local. And Ray Thomas, president of the Chrysler local, squeezed into 17th place. One of John L. Lewis...