Word: herberts
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...news. But the company has invested $1,000,000 in new mechanical equipment, added some 20 reporters to the staff and expanded its business coverage. Last week Hearst headquarters announced that after the turn of the year its Los Angeles hybrid will get a new editor to replace Herbert H. Krauch, 66, a Hearst veteran of 50 years. Krauch's replacement will be John Denson, 59, who recently quit as editor of the New York Herald Tribune after a showdown argument over editorial authority...
Died. Harlow Herbert Curtice, 69, president of General Motors Corp. in 1955 when it produced 3,989,987 cars, more than any other automaker before or since; of a heart attack; in Flint, Mich. (see U.S. BUSINESS...
...through a series of interlocking committees. The System has so many checks built in that it never produces a wrong decision so disastrous that it cannot recover, and it never allows one man to become absolute boss. But it has produced strong men, and one of them was Harlow Herbert Curtice, G.M. President from 1953 to 1958, who died last week of a heart attack in his home in Flint, Mich...
Howe is one of a number of local professors who signed an advertisement favoring McCormack that appeared in Boston newspapers last summer who have now decided to back Hughes. This number includes Gordon W. Allport, professor of Psychology; Serge Ivan Chermayeff, professor of Architecture; Herbert Dieckmann, Smith Professor of the French and Spanish Languages; Sidney B. Fay '96, professor of History, emeritus; and Dante L. Germino of Wellesley College...
...threatening to bust up the alliance is Herbert Hill, 37, the N.A.A.C.P.'s labor secretary since 1951. Hill has taken to tangling with such labor leaders as A.F.L.-C.I.O. President George Meany, United Auto Workers Chief Walter Reuther and the Garment Workers' David Dubinsky. He charges that A.F.L.-C.I.O. unions practice open segregation in some cases, token integration in some others. Cries Hill: "We are going into federal court to develop a whole new body of labor laws in behalf of the Negro. The opposition of Meany, Reuther and Dubinsky to this new effort will not deter...