Word: gustavus
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...When Gustavus Franklin Swift, fifth son and namesake of the Cape Cod meat peddler who founded the House of Swift, became president in 1931, his company had just reported annual sales of $900,000,000. As Depression began to pull down meat prices, hard-working Gus Swift, whose wife bitterly complains that he never has time for play, kept on buying hogs, sheep, cattle. Though his dollar volume dwindled, he processed almost as much meat as he ever had before. ''It was our job to see that the daily cash market . . . was kept open...
...others, besides President Gustavus: Board Chairman Charles Henry Swift, 61, husband of Soprano Claire Dux; Vice President Harold Higgins. Swift, 49, only son of the founder who went to college (University of Chicago); Vice President Alden B. Swift, 48, and Manager Louis Franklin Swift Jr., 38, of the Fort Worth plant, sons of onetime Chairman Louis Franklin Swift who retired as a director last year at the age of 71; ard Nathan B. Swift, 22, son of Alden Swift, now working in the Chicago plant...
...Honorary Pallbearers for Mr. Cram's funeral were: LeBaron R. Briggs '75, Boylston Professor of Oratory and Rhetoric, Arthur L. Endicott '94, Comptroller, George H. Chase '96, John E. Judson, Professor of Archaeology, Arthur H. Brooks '91, William G. Howard '91, Professor of German, Gustavus H. Maynadier '89, Assistant Professor of English, Francis W. Hunnewell '02, Secretary to the Corporation, Roger I. Lee '01, Fellow of Harvard College, Charles M. Thompson '86, Henry A. Yeomans '00, Professor of Government, Charles Palache, Professor of Mineralogy, and Hon. Charles Francis Adams, Overseer of the University. The following were the Ushers...
...biography gives a clearer picture of what manner of woman she was than Hollywood would ever dare. Not a first-rate book, Christina of Sweden at least gives U. S. readers a glimpse of one of the lesser-known figures of history. Only child of the great Gustavus Adolphus, Christina (1626-89) should have been a man, for she always acted like one. Short, ugly and unfeminine, she was a bright student and a hard worker. She liked men's company, the more Rabelaisian the better, but the idea of marriage horrified her. When she came to the throne...
...question was first formulated in the annual convention of the Amateur Athletic Union at Pittsburgh, immediately preceding the Olympic meeting. There bald, white-fringed Gustavus Town Kirby took the floor. He recalled the meeting of the International Olympic Committee last June at Vienna, where German delegates promised not to exclude Jews from their teams. Since then, said Mr. Kirby, Jews had not only been barred from teams but by various Nazi rules had even been prevented from training. He offered a resolution calling upon the American Olympic Association to refuse to send a U. S. team to Berlin "unless...