Word: ohio
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...skillful display of his cloakroom style, New Hampshire's Styles Bridges, 60, last week bolstered his position, held since Ohio's Robert Taft died in 1953, as the behind-the-scenes leader of Senate Republicans. As usual he refused (for health reasons, he again explained) to consider a move from his powerful position on the Appropriations Committee to take on the minority leader title. He preferred instead to back Illinois' Everett Dirksen for the job. To crown Dirksen, Bridges had first to put down a stubborn revolt of Vermont's George Aiken and six other Senate...
...Then it was a lack of infant energy. "I had no worry about her falling or wriggling off a bed," Myrtis Walker says, "because she just stayed exactly where she was put." But soon her father, the Rev. Lorenda R. Walker, took a pastorate in Columbus. The trip to Ohio in a model A Ford was rough, and Marclan came down with pneumonia. At Columbus' Children's Hospital, doctors found something worse: she had sickle-cell anemia. That was early in 1938. It was two years before she went home from the hospital...
...archetype of the fading dog-eat-dog capitalist. Tall and slim (5 ft. 11 in., 175 Ibs.) with frosty blue eyes and arctic white hair, he dresses like Daddy Warbucks (blue suits, grey Homburg) and resides in manorial splendor on huge farms (champion Shorthorn beef cattle) in Ohio and Nova Scotia. His personal wealth is estimated at something like $100 million, and his hard-knuckled grip on U.S. industry extends over a $2 billion empire of iron and steel, railroads, shipping, coal and paint. Cy Eaton picked up his empire by lone-wolf feats of financial derring-do that have...
...Depression clipped Eaton's wings but not his tongue. Railing at Wall Street and the "New York money ring," he became a New Dealer and pro-union, as well as a violent enemy of Ohio's Senator Robert A. Taft because Taft's early isolationism was "a policy as fantastic in theory as it is impossible in practice." Eaton prevented the Taft family from merging Cincinnati's Enquirer with their successful Times-Star by lending the employees $7,600,000 to buy the paper from the management...
...Brower, Master of Adams House appointed Roy A. Gosse '60 of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., to the Council. Gordon M. Fair Master of Dunster House, has appointed Daniel A. Pollack'60, of New York City, and John H. Finley, Master of Eliot House, chose James D. Lorenz Jr.'60 of Dayton, Ohio...