Word: harbord
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Generals James G. Harbord & John J. Carty (president of the Radio Corporation of America and vice-president of the American Telephone & Telegraph Co., respectively), last week recommended communication by a universal language, for the sake of world peace and world efficiency. General Harbord showed that embarrassment and hesitancy between individuals of different nationalities would be reduced. General Carty said that 750,000 of the total world population 1,748,000,000 now knows and uses Esperanto...
Owen D. Young, chairman of Radio Corporation of America, sailed with Mrs. Young last week for a holiday in England, and would not explain. General James G. Harbord, R. C. A.'s president, compressed his lips into silence. President Edward E. Shumaker of Victor Talking Machine Co. let a mask of diffidence hide his thoughts...
April 23, "Radio in the World War and the Organization of an American Owned Transoceanic Radio Service," by General J. G. Harbord, president of the Radio Corporation of America...
General J. S. Harbord, president of the Radio Corporation of America, M. H. Aylesworth, president of the National Broadcasting Company, Dr. F. B. Jewett, president of the Bell Laboratories of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, and Judge S. B. Davis, of New York, are among the lecturers...
...those patent rights. The result was The Radio Corporation of America. But R. C. A. could never have been organized except for the hearty co-operation of U. S. manufacturers of radio devices. Owen D. Young of General Electric became R. C. A.'s chairman, General James Guthrie Harbord its president, David Sarnoff its managing vice president...