Word: inces
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Watson has occupied the Associate Dean's office since he returned to the University in 1946. Before World War II, he was associated with J.P. Morgan, Inc. He entered the Navy as an Ensign in 1940 and left the service as a Commander...
Newspaperman's Newspaper. Last week, plainly in need of stronger medicine, the Herald Tribune was about to get the biggest pick-me-up in its 116-year history (all accompanied by the adjectival drumbeating of Tex McCrary Inc., the radio-TV performer's public-relations outfit). Though it has owned the paper outright ever since Brownie's grandfather Whitelaw took over the old Tribune in 1872, the Reid family decided to reorganize its closed corporation as a Delaware stock company in order to bring in outside capital, lined up several potential investors. To London last week went...
...material to tape-record 30-second hotspots that are used around the clock by 15 radio stations (top price: $50 weekly). Now Miller has filmed his first TV keyhole show (which he hopes to sell to WXEX in Richmond, Va.), and will sign a syndication contract with Intermountain Network, Inc., which will add its 57 Western stations to his string in October and, he hopes, boost his total income from $50,000 to $75,000 a year...
Some makers are already off to a good start in taking their eggs out of the military basket. This year's civilian orders are up 600% for Rem-Cru Titanium Inc., owned jointly by Remington Arms Co. and Crucible Steel Co. of America. The total is still small, but a few big contracts are beginning to roll in. Last week Freeport Sulphur Co. ordered about $500,000 worth of titanium tubing from Titanium Metals Corp. of America to carry a highly corrosive ore slurry at Freeport's new nickel and cobalt mine in Cuba...
Interior turned over Barton's rubber check to the Justice Department, pondered the fact that now it has no authority to release the land. Meanwhile, Barton's Colorado River Enterprises, Inc. produced a second (cashier's) check-payable only on condition that he get more time to arrange the bond-which Acting Interior Secretary Hatfield Chilson frigidly ignored. At such intransigence, Barton lamented: "If the Indians don't get that land developed, it sure won't be my fault. I've done all I could for 'em. I've done my best...