Word: processers
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...well as an able scientist, built up the company that today makes 16,000 tons of carborundum a year, sells it for 15? per Ib. His own inventions, of which he has patented more than 150, include silicon carbide electrodes for high-temperature electric furnaces and a commercial process for making pure metallic silicon. Mr. Tone plays bad golf, likes to hunt & fish in Canada, makes excellent flapjacks...
...bluntly, the Exchange is concerned with inflation. . . . The same enlightened self-interest which impels a corporation executive to prefer a steady and orderly process of trade to alternating periods of dizzy profits and crimson deficits dictates to the Exchange that its true welfare is to be found in the avoidance both of towering 'tops' and drastically depressed 'bottoms...
...follow this through logically. A pupil enrolls in the elementary schools, spends six years there without being required to meet any standards, and passes on to the junior high school, which must then lower its standard to meet his. He goes on to the high school, where the same process is repeated. Then he goes on to college, which will also not require him to meet any standards. From there he goes to medical school, where the same conditions obtain. He gets his degree and goes to a hospital to serve his interneship and is told that he will...
...lobbyist once declared: "I've been told by physicians that if he ever developed a sore throat he would choke to death." However, the fact that this year Mr. Hopson has spent only a month in his Manhattan office is probably traceable to a devout desire to dodge process servers. Among Associated suits now pending are a mail-fraud case and a stockholders' action to recover some $1,000,000 allegedly milked from the system by a Hopson personal holding company. In announcing their chief's resignation, Associated said that Mr. Hopson would retain his "interest...
...expensive soap lawyers (TIME, Oct. 15). Last week Judge Slick, whose brother runs a laundry, handed down a short (1,500 word) decision, concluding: "While defendant's [Lever's] product resembles to the casual observer the product of plaintiffs, it in many respects is quite dissimilar. . . . Neither defendant's process nor its product infringes on the patents of plaintiffs...