Word: oppenheimers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...quickly recovered by using Bankers Securities to take over City Stores (Oppenheim-Collins and Franklin Simon), Loft Candy Corp. (267 stores) and other diversified interests. Greenfield, a big booster of Philadelphia urban redevelopment and the Democratic Party, will be succeeded by Gustave G. Amsterdam, 50, an associate for the past 20 years and president of Bankers Securities since...
Shortly after the Liberal Union elected new officers, including Emily L. Hart-shorne '62, secretary, and Vivian M. Oppenheim '62, Radcliffe affairs chairman, the organization was notified that it had not complied with University regulations concerning mixed clubs. "We thought we had official sanction, since the Liberal Union has several Radcliffe members," Bardeen explained...
Other new officers of the organization include: Emily L. Hartshorne '62, secretary; Frederic Freilicher '60, treasurer; David F. Bartlett '59, Harvard affairs chairman; Vivian H. Oppenheim '62, Radcliffe affairs chairman; John J. Coffey '61, political affairs chairman; Stanley G. Brown '60, membership chairman; and Robert E. Friedman '62, publicity chairman...
...sketchy jazz accompaniment for his new poem, Thou Shalt Not Kill, a lengthy dirge for long-lost friends, mostly poets: "What happened to Robinson who used to stagger down Eighth Street, dizzy with solitary gin? ... Where is Leonard who thought he was a locomotive? . . . What became of Jim Oppenheim? . . . Where is Sol Funaroff? What happened to Potamkin? . . . One sat up all night talking to H. L. Mencken and drowned himself in the morning." Then the Rexroth verse turns to a super Bohemian and aman who was also a good poet: Dylan Thomas. When Rexroth first read the poem, 500 fans...
Behind the Red colonel's capture lay a bizarre story-only partly exposed last week by tight-lipped Justice officials-that in spots seemed to reflect equal doses of Alec Guinness and E. Phillips Oppenheim. Aided by his invaluable surface nonentity, Rudolf Abel had been a successful spy since 1927, spoke fluent English, French, German, was a good hand at electronics, mechanical engineering, photography. With a fake U.S. birth certificate in his pocket, Abel slipped into the U.S. in 1948 at "an unknown point" along the Canadian border. At home in Russia he left his wife, son, married daughter...