Word: indianas
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...through mid-September was up only 9%. Government officials shudder at the implications of some industrial stocks-on-hand statistics (as of Aug. 1): electric utilities had 62 days' supply (compared to 80 days' last year); Ohio steel mills had 20 days' supply (v. 23); Illinois-Indiana by-product coke ovens had 47 (v. 72). At year's end all U.S. industry will probably have no more than 27 days' supply. Other dangerous possibilities...
Walter Jackson Bate, '39 Claverly 23, went to Morton High School in Richmond, Indiana, before coming to Harvard. As an upperclassman he lived in Dunster House...
...INDIANA: Armin E. Gutstein, Kendallville; Thomas V. Keene, Jr., Indianapolis; Samuel E. Stuart II, Fort Wayne...
...four and one-half years). Despite this stiff requirement, the Navy is already doing very well, recruiting at the rate of 10,300 per month. To run this up to 15,000 it is expanding an experiment in small-town newspaper advertising for recruits. Test advertisements in Missouri, Iowa, Indiana doubled the monthly enlistment rate in those States, will soon appear in 13 more States (Nebraska, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee). But the basic appeal is still the same: see the world...
...rehabilitation of existing blast furnaces, the pig-iron program includes ten new furnaces: one each at Gadsden and Birmingham, Ala., Cleveland and Youngstown, Ohio (for Republic Steel), at Johnstown, Pa. and Lackawanna, N.Y. (for Bethlehem), at Braddock, Pa. (for U.S.), at Pueblo, Colo, (for Colorado Fuel & Iron), two at Indiana Harbor (for Inland). At Provo, Utah (or perhaps at Pittsburg, Calif.) U.S. Steel's Columbia works is due to get three more blast furnaces, to be shipped second-hand from eastern mills where they were not in use, would have to be torn down for rebuilding anyway...