Word: louise
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Few Frenchmen wept when they read in their newspapers one October morning in 1944 that Louis Renault had died in a Paris nursing home. He had been rich, powerful and famous, cantankerous, brilliant, often brutal, the little Napoleon of an automaking empire. But France's only eulogy for him...
Eleven students have signed a petition calling for a new time for the special section of Mathematics 1b-2a which is to be given this term by Louis A. Schmittroth, instructor in Mathematics. The course is at present scheduled to meet Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday at 11 a.m.
MILWAUKEE'S SCHLITZ is again the No. 1 U.S. beer, after having been nosed out by St. Louis' Anheuser-Busch (Budweiser) in 1953 and 1954. The 1955 sales totals: 5,780,000 bbls. for Schlitz, close to 100,000 bbl. more than Anheuser-Busch.
Died. Johnny Layton, 68, famed billiards champion of the '20s and '30s, seven-time winner (1920-22, 1928-30, 1934) of the world three-cushion title, winner (in 1916) of the world pocket-billiards title; of a heart ailment; at a rooming house in St. Louis.
Died. Louis Oppenheimer, 85, director of London's Diamond Corp., which controls 90% of the world's diamond production; in Gerrard's Cross, England. One of five brothers who built the worldwide Oppenheimer holdings (i.e., the Anglo-American Corp., with more than 200 subsidiaries in gold, diamonds...