Word: nonprofit
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...lapse of 20 years: he first entered the State Department in 1915, held posts in China, the Middle East, Latin America, Spain and Czechoslovakia, rose to Assistant Secretary of State in the Coolidge and Hoover Administrations. After leaving diplomacy in 1933, he became vice president, then president of the nonprofit Foreign Bondholders' Protective Council...
...Hoffman's interim successor, the Ford Foundation trustees selected H. (for Horace) Rowan Gaither Jr., 43, San Francisco lawyer, board chairman of the nonprofit Rand Corp. (scientific research), and onetime assistant director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's radiation laboratory. Gaither has been a Ford Foundation adviser since...
...Secretary, giving particular attention to tax policies. Folsom served (1934-35) on the council which developed the Social Security program and on other business advisory groups appointed by Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman. Since 1950 he has been the brilliant chairman of the Committee for Economic Development, a private, nonprofit research organization. ¶Horace Chapman ("Chappie") Rose, 45, Cleveland corporation lawyer, who will be Assistant Secretary. Rose's firm (Jones, Day, Cockley & Reavis) represents Humphrey's mammoth M. A. Hanna Co., and his estate in the Cleveland suburbs neighbors Humphrey's. No stranger on the Washington scene...
...fiscal year 1952, the Federal Government doled out nearly $542 million for research and development in the nation's nonprofit institutions-$44 million more than it spent in 1951 and more than 60% of all the money spent on research and development in the U.S. Last week the National Science Foundation released some preliminary figures to show how the money is being spent...
...good deal of credit for the 1952 showing goes to a spectacular get-out-the-vote drive sparked by American Heritage Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan agency. Beginning last June, the foundation (chairman: New York Banker Winthrop Aldrich; vice chairman A.F.L. President William Green) went hammer & tongs to obtain the cooperation of civic groups, broadcasters, editors, educators, cartoonists, advertisers...