Word: hoggs
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...author of "What's in a Name?" (ESSAY, Aug. 18) should not play footloose with the truth. "The famous Miss Hogg" was named Ima by her father not out of cruelty but in honor of his deceased brother, who had earlier published an epic poem of the Civil War, The Fate of Marvin. The heroine was Ima, a paragon of womanhood, equally disposed to nurse the wounded soldiers of North and South. Miss Hogg did not "grow up scowling" but was a good-humored woman of gracious mien and poise, who because of her untiring benefactions to the people...
Some names have a special kind of imprint. The famous Miss Hogg, whose father cruelly named her Ima, had good reason to grow up scowling, but maybe she would have even if she had been named something sweet, like Charlotte. Anyone named James Oliver Buswell IV carries his parents' announcement of a certain view of the child's place in the world, but the effect of such a view probably differs considerably from one person to another. Someone with a name like Otto inevitably knows the burdens of an ethnic heritage, but so, presumably, do Madonna Ciccone and Fernando Valenzuela...
...debate and its 1933 counterpart. The Oxford Union's treasurer back then was Labor Party Leader Michael Foot, who did not speak on that famous first occasion but today advocates unilateral nuclear disarmament for Britain. One of the featured speakers last week was Member of Parliament Douglas Hogg, who, like his father before him, argued the case for fighting. Another was Historian Max Beloff, 69, who as an Oxford undergraduate 50 years ago supported the pacifist line. This time Beloff, a lord, was on the other side. Said he: "Those of us who voted for the first motion have...
...that type of consumer reaction. Says Fran Schall, a Visa vice president: "This will be a status symbol for many customers. It will be very important to pull it out at a business lunch, especially when colleagues may not have the same card." Adds MasterCard President Russell E. Hogg: "Recognition is one of the greatest marketing tools in America, and the gold card is recognized as prestige...
Seven months ago, Russell Hogg (rhymes with vogue), 50, became president of MasterCard, and set out to take back leadership in bank credit cards. A craggy onetime FBI agent with executive experience at American Express and American Airlines, Hogg promptly fired eight top officials and laid plans for a host of new products. The debit card is soon to be followed by a Japanese MasterCard and traveler's checks...