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Like his older brother, Benson had already put in his time working in the Rouge plant. As a Princeton undergraduate he worked summers, and later, when he left Princeton (without a degree), he was a grease monkey in the dynamometer division. He married an automobile man's daughter, Edith McNaughton (her father was salesmanager of G.M.'s Cadillac Division), and in 1941 he was made a director of Ford Motor Co. All last year, as a member of the policy committee, he has been learning Ford finance. He has also been chafing at so much tutelage. What...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AUTOS: Brother's Turn | 2/9/1948 | See Source »

...method, although not startlingly new, proves that a virus can be produced rapidly and cheaply. He took brain tissue from polio-infected mice, chopped it up, put it in an alcohol solution, then precipitated the virus by spinning it in an ordinary laboratory centrifuge. He worked with MM (mouse-monkey) virus, which does not affect human beings; but his method, he believes, can be used to isolate viruses that attack humans. When that is done, researchers can begin work on a vaccine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Another Step Foward | 2/2/1948 | See Source »

...natural athlete. Her daddy taught her how to swim in two weeks. She climbed trees like a monkey and hung by her knees from the branches. She rode horseback and played golf. Skating was her own idea. From her father, who despite his invalid body worked 18 to 20 hours a day in the Department of National Defense, she learned tenacity. In the barnlike Minto Club, not far from her house, she practiced her first figures;-learning to do eights, brackets and counters ; to skate on the inside or outside edge of the runners (never on the flat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Ice Queen | 2/2/1948 | See Source »

Marine Fireworks. Candidate Douglas has none too happy a reputation with party workers. As a rebellious and reform bent city alderman, he had thrown many a prewar monkey wrench into the Kelly-Nash machine. He had been badly beaten in the 1942 senatorial primary. Then (while his wife, Emily Taft Douglas, guarded the family political fortunes by serving a term in Congress), he had gone off to fight as a private in the Marines. Twice wounded, he came home a hero and a lieutenant colonel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ILLINOIS: Gentleman & Scholar | 1/12/1948 | See Source »

Simian Sainta. In Denver, Mrs. Billie Shannon and her nine-year-old monkey, Skippit, entertained 23 less fortunate monkeys from the city zoo. Skippit was dressed like Santa Claus and passed out tiny wheelbarrows and toy washboards to his colleagues. In Kansas, whose citizens may legally consume nothing stronger than 3.2 beer, police poured $25,000 worth of whiskey down a drain. But elsewhere liquor sales-particularly of bonded Bourbon-boomed. An Indianapolis liquor dealer contrived a new kind of window display -a Nativity scene set up in a Haig & Haig carton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PEOPLE: Christmas, 1947 | 12/29/1947 | See Source »

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