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...Business School Professor W. Carl Kester noted that salaries which blow minds in academia are often par for the course in the world of finance...

Author: By R. ALAN Leo, | Title: Despite 'Disappointing' Year, Salaries at HMC Skyrocket | 7/19/1996 | See Source »

...Kester has been elected president Harvard Law Review, Volume new staff members are: Michael , treasurer; Pierre N. Leval P. Schulse, note editors; Banner and Robert S. Malina, ; Charles W. Bender and Brennan, article editors; Calhoun, developments editor; V. DeLong, book review and editor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Elects | 3/29/1962 | See Source »

Rene Tillich's short story "Point of View" and Ralph Hickock's poem "Song" are the two best pieces in the first issue of Voices. James Hill and Eleanor Kester both contribute some good poetry, although the bank-clerk-and-pin-collar ghost of T.S. Eliot appears to haunt Hill and most of the Voices poets...

Author: By John D. Leonard, | Title: A Little Magazine with Stature | 8/7/1958 | See Source »

...school," says Architect Richard Neutra, "is essentially a container out of which organic life can bloom." At the Kester Avenue elementary school in Van Nuys, Calif., life can bloom both indoors and out. Rooms can be made big or small with movable partitions; the furniture can be moved about for any sort of activity. "I do not consider a school only as a machine for learning," says Neutra. "It should be beautiful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Oceans of Piffle | 9/7/1953 | See Source »

Like Thomas Cowan, "Buck" Kester once had a conservative Presbyterian charge (in West Virginia), left it and Presbyterianism together. Now a Congregationalist, he busies himself with lecturing, organizing labor, and escaping from Southern towns which dislike agitators. Once he avoided being lynched by crawling on his belly for a quarter-mile to escape from a Florida town. He explained: ". . . There was nothing to be gained by staying and I was scared." Against the likes of "Buck" Kester, Arkansas and Mississippi planters protested last February, publicly appealing to Southern churches "not to make their tenants and sharecroppers class-conscious...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Southern Prophets | 4/3/1939 | See Source »

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