Word: glasgowe
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Despite these disadvantages, a town paper is the best and almost only way to enter journalism, Robert W. Glasgow, Horlad Tribune labor reporter, said. "It's awfully difficult to get a job in New York these days...
Other speakers include Robert W. Glasgow, labor reporter for the Herald Tribune; Victor O. Jones '28, Night Editor of the Boston Globe; and Walter H. Waggoner of the New York Times...
...table showing what the Soviet and U.S. worker must give in working time in order to obtain the same quantities of food and other items [TIME, Dec. 29] was most interesting. Is it possible, to publish a similar comparison between the British and U.S. worker? ALEX I. G. FARQUHARSON Glasgow, Scotland...
...Tool. The career started 14 years ago. Eccles, a staunch Mormon, was also a staunch advocate of the theory that money is a tool to be used, not hoarded. As a young man in Mormon frock coat and silk hat, he had proselytized for the Latter-Day Saints along Glasgow's Clydeside. As a Utah enterpriser, he had used the sizable fortune inherited from his pioneer father to build a small empire of sugar, lumber and construction companies, and 28 banks throughout Utah and Idaho...
...days later, in the Glasgow slum of Camlachie, men in grimy cloth caps and women in shawls trudged out to vote. Result: Conservative Charles McFarlane, a black-browed hardware manufacturer, squeaked to a 395-vote victory over Labor's John M. Inglis, an engine driver. Winston Churchill wired "heartiest congratulations." It was the first time since 1945 (and in 23 tries) that a Tory had won a Labor-held seat in a by-election. But the "glorious victory" the Tories exulted in was not clear-cut; three independents had sapped about 2,500 votes from Labor's strength...