Word: kaisers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...poll to be made public, he has done a disservice to his own field of Social Relations. But what is worse, and what we cannot allow to go unnoticed, is the fact that he has also done a disservice to the guiding principle of this University: Veritas. Waiter Kaiser '54 Philip Kuhn '54 Paul D. Sheats '54 Daniel Steiner...
While few people think that every family's health could or should be totally insured down to the price of the last aspirin tablet, there is still a big job to be done by industry. One of industry's most ambitious insurance plans is California's Kaiser Foundation Health Plan. Started by Henry J. Kaiser eight years ago to cover 40,000 employees, it has spread far beyond his own companies; the plan now covers more than 400,000 subscribers, and its fourteenth hospital, a $3,000,000 glass structure, has recently opened in San Francisco. Under...
Farewell to Chiseling. German-born Hans Goldschmidt, who earned his doctor's degree in administrative engineering at the University of Berlin, set out in 1945 to invent the machine that would make his fortune. He was earning good pay as a time-study man at the Kaiser shipyards in Richmond. Calif., but he expected the job to fold after war's end, and he did not want to go back to chiseling out a bare living in a one-man woodwork shop, as he had done in his first few years in the U.S. Recalling a newspaper article...
Immediately following the Kimball story is the best of the magazine's three unexciting poems, Letter, by Walter Kaiser. His poem has a delicate sensuality reminiscent of MacLeish, and Kaiser handles his images well. The two other pieces, The Bridgegroom, by Winifred Hare and The Promised End, by David Chandler do not measure up to it. Chandler has a pretty turn of vision, but his poem is vacuous...
...great, great, great, and ad infinitum grandson of God [i.e., the son of the Aga Khan]." But the days of ancestor worship are more or less over, and in point of prestige, the Harvard clubman has become the vanishing American. Once, Theodore Roosevelt, 1880, could happily blurt to the Kaiser that his son-in-law was Porcellian ("A mighty satisfactory thing to be in the Pore"). In 1954, such fathers-in-law are rare...