Word: keezerism
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...student explains, because "when you look at one of those ties you want to blow your lunch") topped off with a Red Baron Flying Ace helmet, complete with ear flaps and shrapnel holes. At Harvard, the grapevine passes the word around within hours whenever Secondhand Deal er Max Keezer or "Morgie's" (Goodwill Industry's Morgan Memorial) gets in any old taxi-driver hats or brownand-white shoes, and some Harvards are even beginning to talk antique: "Those teeny-boppers are a caution." Getting the Message. Women, after years of going hatless, are now covering up again...
...Dexter Keezer, McGraw-Hill Economic Adviser: Economic recovery is in the making - and pretty largely without regard to what the new Administration does or says about...
...kind of platinum-plated recession many economists see was well described by Dexter Keezer of McGraw-Hill. He expects that 1961 will actually show a healthy increase in overall economic activity as measured by the gross national product; he estimates that G.N.P. will drop to $502 billion in 1961's first quarter, then turn around to $507 billion in the second quarter, rise to $522 billion in the third. He looks for a drop in the Federal Reserve Board's index of industrial production from its present 107 to about 100 in 1961's second quarter - with...
...left Roxbury that day, and made his way over to Harvard Square and Max Keezer's used clothing store. The next time he was seen at Whalen's Place, Curley sported full evening dress--cutaway and striped pants. Shabby though it may have been in a few places, his Harvard cutaway helped Curley make a name for himself. He wore it in campaigns for thirteen years until he was elected to Congress in 1911. Then Curley gave the suit away to a cousin who, in due time, he saw waked...
Narrowing the focus still further, Economist Dexter M. Keezer, director of the McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. Economic Department, predicted that house building, down this year, will rise 10% to a total $16 billion in 1958, balancing in part a 7% decline (to $34.5 billion) in plant expansion. And by 1960-"perhaps before," added Keezer-"investment in new plant and equipment will be heading for another record...