Word: kaisers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...homeland had soared and sunk through two great historical phases and entered a third. Two of these phases Konrad Adenauer had lived out in a routine of efficient ordinariness and relative obscurity. He was born (Jan. 5, 1876) in the age of Bismarck; he was already 42 when the Kaiser fell. Through the sad days of the Weimar Republic and the ugly early days of Naziism he was respected as veteran mayor of Cologne and a wily politician, until he was forced out of office by the Nazis, for whom he showed nothing but flinty scorn. Had he died...
Despite all this, competition in 1954 will be fierce. Last year saw one big auto merger (Kaiser-Frazer and Willys), and heard rumors of another (Hudson and Nash); 1954 may bring more of the same as independents battle to keep their share of the market. Meanwhile, General Motors' Harlow Curtice plans to spend $300 million in expanding production...
When Theodore Roosevelt was discussing the marriage of his daughter to Nicholas Longworth, he confided boastfully to a perplexed Kaiser Wilhelm that he and Nick had both belonged to the Porc. At that time, Roosevelt was not alone in considering membership an important qualification for a son-in-law. Boston mothers, on the prowl for young gentlemen eligible for debutante dances, turned to the clubs to provide them. And The Institute of 1770 even had ranking within itself: the first seventy or eighty elected to it from each class were termed Dickeys, from the name of a secret society D.K.E...
Hardest hit under the new deal will be the expansion plans of big industrial power users, particularly the aluminum industry, which uses more than a third of Bonneville's electricity. Said one Kaiser official: The new contracts "push into the misty distance any future industrial expansion in the Pacific Northwest...
...brightest young graduate researchers at Berlin's Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in the mid-20s were Fritz Albert Lipmann and Hans Adolf Krebs. Both took their work in biochemistry with utmost seriousness, but they never discussed the possibility of future fame. They would have been even less likely to do so if they had been able to foresee the course of German politics. Both were Jews...