Word: ince
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Advertising Council, Inc., a peacetime extension of an effective wartime agency, began a nation-wide campaign recently in which TIME is vitally interested (see p. 115). The object of the campaign is to acquaint every individual American with the critical importance to him of world trade & world travel...
Serge Koussevitzky, 72, the Boston Symphony's prestigious maestro for the past 22 years, went to court in Manhattan and gave a new publishing firm (Allen, Towne & Heath, Inc.) a blazing sendoff on its very first book. Title: Koussevitzky. Author: ex-Boston Music Critic Moses Smith. The maestro sued to stop publication. The book, he complained, "describes me as ... incompetent . . . brutal ... a poseur . . . attacks my integrity . . . impugns my loyalty and slanders a lifetime of work." Besides, complained the maestro, it might spoil the sale of a literary project of his own: the Koussevitzky autobiography...
Died. Kenneth Craven Hogate, 49, hefty Hoosier publisher of the Wall Street Journal, president of Barren's Publishing Co., chairman of Dow, Jones & Co., Inc. (financial ticker service), close friend and 1944 presidential campaign adviser of Thomas E. Dewey; of a cerebral hemorrhage; in Palm Springs, Calif...
Professor Fraser has been Assistant Dean at the Business School since 1940, when he returned there after a ten-year period of business activity, during which he served as Treasurer and Director of Incorporated Investors, and later as President and Director of the Boston Fund, Inc. He was the author of several books in the field of finance, including "Finance" and "Problems in Finance." In the years from 1930 to 1940, he was active in the Republicans Party and was a delegate from Massachusetts to the National Convention...
Ripping Ruckus. How the tangle developed is best illustrated by Lockheed. When Gross first decided to invade the commercial plane market, he found most of the big customers already sewed up by Douglas, leaving him no choice but to concentrate on Transcontinental and Western Air, Inc. Lockheed could see a bright future as long as T.W.A. prospered. But when T.W.A. was crippled by a pilots' strike, Lockheed suffered immediately-through T.W.A.'s cancellation of orders for eight new Constellations. And when T.W.A. was ripped by a refinancing ruckus between No. 1 Stockholder Howard Hughes and President Jack Frye...