Word: huntingtonism
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...deceased. Brother Edward's two children, George Huntington Hartford II (the art and theater entrepreneur) and Mrs. Josephine Bryce, share 10% each of A. & P.'s stock, as do Mrs. Allan Mclntosh and Mrs. Charles Robertson, daughters of sister Marie Louise and Mrs. Rachel Carpenter, granddaughter of sister Marie Josephine whose five other grandchildren share the remaining...
Died. George Ludlum Hartford, 92, chairman and financial wizard behind the growth of the A. & P. stores (for their future, see BUSINESS); of uremia; in Montclair, NJ. Inheriting the company in 1915 from their father, George Huntington Hartford, who had launched it with a small tea store on Manhattan's Vesey Street in 1859, George L. and brother John spread its power across the country, slashed prices by mass buying, produced their own products. "Mr. George," as he was known to company employees, anticipated the 1929 crash, signed store leases on a yearly basis only...
Both Edward L. Katzenbach, director of the Harvard Defense Studies Program, and Samuel P. Huntington, assistant professor of Government, agreed that America's satellite would not be put on a crash basis...
...There is not enough money for it," Huntington said. "The defense budget is a gruesome mistake," he continued. "The program should have been pressed much faster, but given the framework of a $38 billion budget, there wasn't much that could be done...
...students in Education, Associate Dean Judson T. Shaplin, Lawrence Hall; Law, John King, Jr.; Langdell Hall; Medical, Dr. Kendall Emerson Jr., 721 Huntington Ave., Boston; Public Administration, Professor Arthur Maass, Littauer 119; Public Health, Dr. Donald L. Augustine, Dept. of Tropical Health, 55 Shattuck St., Boston...