Word: lamont
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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HARVARD 1932 YALE 1932 Speck, g. g., Hamman Lowneberg, pt. pt., McDede Myerson, c.pt. c.pt., William Field, 1d. 1d., Flygare Winer, 2d. 2d., Bullard Wilder, 3d. 3d., Martin Pattison, c. c., Jones Watt, 3a. 3a., Devaney Cochran, 2a. 2a., Beggs Keck, 1a. 1a., Draper Lay, o.h. o.h., Lamont Ruhl, i.h. i.h., Corbin...
...Rudy Lamont Ruggles '31 of Brookline has been awarded a scholarship by the Students' International Union which enables him to study in Geneva, Switzerland during the coming summer. The award was made as the result of a competition among numerous eastern colleges and makes Ruggles the official delegate of Harvard at the Union's headquarters in Switzerland...
Last week, in Paris, Morgan-Partner Thomas W. Lamont agreed with Chairman Owen D. Young of the Radio Corp. of America that it would be pleasant for all concerned if the International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. should take over Radio's newborn (TIME, April 1) subsidiary, R.C.A. Communications, Inc. So formal and so important was this friendly agreement that it at once was called an ACCORD. A price was mentioned, around $100,000,000. Vice President David Sarnoff of Radio and Nelson Dean Jay of Morgan's Paris house talked details. U. S. directors of both companies hastily met and approved...
Competition. So complete, so thoughtfully lucid is the White Act, that its meaning could not be twisted to meet the desires of the most ingenious mergophile. If the union of I.T.&T. with R.C.A. Communications will "substantially lessen competition," the Lamont-Young deal will be held a violation of the law, will doubtless be haled before the courts. As Negotiators Lamont and Young are famed not only as financiers, but also as highly ethical businessmen and citizens, they could scarcely plan to flout the law. The only possible alternative, therefore, is the proposition that radio and telegraph...
...wires can be conveniently laid and wherever traffic is heavy, wires are better than wireless. In a world system, telegraph wires act as collecting and distributing agencies for the long-distance leaps of cable and radio. Some such far-seeing plan may have been in the minds of Negotiators Lamont and Young, last week, when they proposed to join R.C.A. Communications to I.T.&T.'s vast network of cable, telegraph and telephone. And on the basis of such a plan, the two corporations may appeal (may indeed, have already appealed) to Washington for approval of their deal...