Word: graustein
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...History of Science 1 Sem. Mus. 1Italian 1 Harvard 5Mathematics A1Professor Graustein, Sec. 1 Memorial HallDr. Gergen, Sec. 2 Memorial HallMr. Adams, Sec. 3 Memorial HallMr. Frame, Sec. 4 Memorial HallMr. Galbraith, Sec. 5 Memorial HallMr. Morrey Sec. 6 Memorial HallMr. Myers Sec. 7 Memorial HallMr. Whitney, Sec. 8 Memorial HallMathematics 3 Harvard 2Music 4 Music Bldg.Philosophy 4b Emerson JPhysics DAdlis-Stokes Geol. Lect. RoomTalkov-Yungblut Pierce 110Physics 2a Pierce 110Physics 31 Pierce 110Physiology 1 Sever 23Romance Philology 3Anderson-Irvine Sever 17Lazarus-Worcester Sever 18Social Ethics 1a Emerson
Every year the Hearstpapers, largest consumers of newsprint in the world, use approximately 465,000 tons of white, green, pink and peach colored paper. Last year hard-hitting President Archibald Robertson Graustein of International Paper Co. (subsidiary of International Paper & Power Co.) got the contract to supply Hearst with newsprint for five years at $55.20 per ton. Later he fought-and bested-the premiers of Quebec and Ontario when they tried to up the price to $60 (TIME, Dec. 9 et seq.). But the position of a U. S. paper company in Canada is not an easy one. More- over...
...Montreal with three stenographers bustled I. P. & P.'s stocky thick-lipped president, Archibald Robertson Graustein, onetime infant prodigy, brilliant Harvard scholar (TIME, April 29). Newsprint at $60 the ton was impossible! President Graustein had columns of figures at the tip of his tongue. Speaking with the authority of a half-billion-dollar corporation, he was ready to prove his point. A spur to his arguments was the uncomfortable fact that I. P. & P. had a four-year contract to supply Publisher William Randolph Hearst with newsprint at a price range of $50 to $55 a ton, and breaking...
Paperman Graustein did not realize the power of Premier Taschereau. The Hon. Louis Alexandré Taschereau is of a family superpotent in Quebec politics. His father, the Hon. Jean Thomas Taschereau, was a judge of the supreme court. Still more important was his uncle, the late great Elzear Alexandré Taschereau, dour-faced Archbishop of Quebec, first Canadian Cardinal, a founder of Laval University and for over 50 years an immense power in the life of the province. Premier Louis, cardinal's nephew, was destined from the first for a public career. Premier since 1920, he it was who framed the widely...
Excited at the news, Vice President J. L. Fearing of International Paper Co. (I. P. & P. subsidiary) telephoned to Montreal to learn the reason for his chief's sudden reversal. By this time President Graustein had recovered somewhat from his interview with the two premiers...