Word: kellogg
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...expert witness on power-plant sites. SEC called up University of Mississippi Engineering Dean Frederic H. Kellogg, a onetime Panama Canal geologist. Testified Kellogg: "A safe plant could be built at [West Memphis] but . . . foundation soil and river conditions . . . would make the overall substructure costs significantly higher than at other nearby locations." At a press conference, AEChair-man Lewis Strauss defended the site, saying that the Army Corps of Engineers had approved the West Memphis site as "a safe place" after surveying 16 proposed locations. But, as it turned out, the Army Engineers had nothing to do with the plant...
...Michigan State College, the three-year-old Kellogg Center has housed as many as 62 separate professional and industrial conferences in one month. M.S.C. also gives seven TV courses: (e.g., Greek Glory, Typing, Art Appreciation), and 92 off-campus courses for credit. Among them: Organic Chemistry in Midland, Mental Hygiene in Clarkston, Public Opinion in Flint, Basic Economics in Battle Creek...
...CRIMSON noted that a new book of Dutch satirical cartoons had been added to the Baker Library that might be "of interest in connection with the present stock market decline..." This momentary awareness of economics was immediately dropped, however, for more important discussions of the feasibility of Senator Kellogg's efforts toward world peace...
Then came graduation. It was amid the presentation of honorary degrees to Franklin D, Roosevelt, Charles Francis Adams, Senator Kellogg, and Serge Koussevitsky on June 20, 1929, that the largest number of University students ever to receive degrees up to that time marched into the Sever Quadrangle. Among the 1,957 degrees presented, 695 went to members of the Senior Class...
...Bennett Archambault, 44, moved over from the M. W. Kellogg Co. (a Pullman Inc. subsidiary that builds equipment for oil refineries) to become president and chief executive officer of Stewart-Warner Corp. (lubricating equipment, television, electronic products, auto parts, heating plants, etc.). A Californian, Archambault grew up in Montana, attended Georgia Tech, graduated from M.I.T., joined Kellogg in 1935 and worked his way up to vice president and general manager. During World War II, he headed the European division of the U.S. Office of Scientific Research and Development, won U.S. and British decorations for pioneering new weapons and equipment...