Word: kelloggs
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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After he signed the Kellogg Pact, a crashing French salute boomed for Mr. Stimson's predecessor as Secretary of State, Mr. Kellogg; but last week the Leviathan cleared from Cherbourg amid silence, a reminder that although France and Italy signed the more nebulous portions of the Treaty they did not sign its more vital, binding clauses. More than making up for French silence, President Herbert Hoover sent the battleship Texas and four destroyers to blaze a 19-gun salute as the Leviathan neared Manhattan where Police Commissioner Aloysius ("Gardenia") Whalen greeted the delegates, sped them to Washington...
...result of the preliminaries of the contest for the medal France-Amerique, six men were chosen last night to speak in the finals to be held the last week in May. The men selected were: Gregory Stone '30, G. W. Sands '30, R. M. Kellogg '30, E. C. Tatham '30, L. R. Shulman '32, and Jacob Canter...
Shakeup. The Government wheat problem was further confused by a shakeup, more important than appeared on the surface, within the Farm Board's agencies. Last December National Grain Corp. hired William G. Kellogg as general manager. Mr. Kellogg had been a Minneapolis cash grain dealer. His brother John had been involved in the Armour Grain Corp. fiasco which caused his suspension for two years from the Chicago Board of Trade. Early this year when wheat broke badly Grain Corp., with the Farm Board's sanction, organized Stabilization Corp. to go into the pit and trade...
Last week Mr. Kellogg was permitted to resign as both general manager of Grain Corp. and vice president of Stabilization Corp. The customary excuse was used: "The pressure of other affairs which will require his undivided attention." But there were few wheat men in Chicago who did not believe that Mr. Kellogg, despite his three-year contract, had been eased out because of the botch he had made of U. S. wheat trading, the ill will he had engendered among growers and dealers alike...
...second group of debaters, composed of J. M. Swigert '30, F. C. Flechter '32, and D. J. Cooke, Jr. '31, visited Georgetown, Duquesne University, Ohio University, Butler University, and Mount Union College. At Georgetown they debated on the Kellogg Pact, losby a four out of five vote. At Duquesne University, speaking on the subject of "Limiting the Enrollment in Colleges to those who show that they are suitably equipped to enter," the Crimson forces won by a unanimous vote. In the debate at Butler, the subject of which was the Harvard Debating Council Plan, the audience was asked to vote...