Word: ince
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Henry used the letterhead of a reputable firm which employed him, represented on it to the War Department that he had a company and plant equipped to turn out 4.2-in. mortar shells. This company, the Erie Basin Metal Products Inc., did not then actually exist. But soon after Pearl Harbor the War Department gave Dr. Garsson's nonmachined firm a whopping order for shells. Meantime Henry Garsson had found two men-Allen B. Gellman and Joseph Weiss of Chicago-who had factories and machines but no war contracts...
...class by itself was the Big Inch Oil Inc.'s bid of $110 million: $1 million down payment, $65 million on the sale-closing date, $44 million in corporation income debentures. Intending to act as a common carrier (i.e., not engaged in producing refining or marketing petroleum products), Big Inch Oil, Inc. has the added advantage in Government eyes of falling under ICC regulations...
Preparing to launch its study of atomic energy, Associated Universities, Inc., the newly-formed group of nine eastern universities, has chosen Edward Reynolds '15, Vice-President of Harvard, as its first president, it was announced by Major General Leslie R. Groves, head of the Army's Manhattan Project for atomic development, last Friday...
...Aragon-Baldwin Mills, Duncan Mills, M. T. Stevens & Sons Co., Slater-Carter-Stevens, Inc., Victor-Monagha'n Co., Watts Mills, Piedmont Manufacturing Co., Republic Cotton Mills, Wallace Manufacturing Co., Inc...
Atop a wave of postwar business mergers, two whitecaps stood out last week: J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc., one of the oldest names in the U.S. textile industry, wove a new pattern with nine fabric manufacturers.* The proposed combine would put 28 mills under one management, give the company the industry's biggest capitalization: $75 million. The fabric would be loosely woven, with each company keeping its present management and operating as a division of Stevens. Biggest advantage: common ownership of mills making rayon, cotton and woolen fabrics, as a hedge against a collapse in the market...