Word: reynoldses
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
For several of the reasons that make it a lively newspaper, the neat, tight Chicago Sun-Times (circ. 588,181) loses more capable newsmen than any other Chicago daily. One reason is that the Sun-Times diligently recruits promising staffers, pushes them ahead-and loses many to bigger jobs elsewhere...
Alarmed by newsroom turnover, ailing Publisher Marshall Field Jr. last February moved able Pete Akers upstairs to a seventh-floor executive suite. Into the fourth-floor office as assistant executive editor and working boss of the news staff went studious Larry Fanning, 43, onetime (1941-54) managing editor of the...
Bright, hard-charging Newsman Reynolds, onetime (1938-41) White House correspondent for United Press, was hired by the late Merchant Prince Marshall Field on the recommendation of their mutual friend, Franklin Roosevelt, who once showed his affection for Reporter Reynolds by sending his wife two dozen roses on the birth...
Several University officials are already advising Cambridge on various plans. Jose L. Sert, Dean of the Faculty of Design, is chairman of the Cambridge Planning Board. President Pusey, Vice-President Edward Reynolds '15, and several Harvard faculty are members of the Citizens Advisory Committee for Cambridge.
¶ Bowman Gray, 50, moved up from executive vice president to president of R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. (Camel, Winston, Salem), second largest U.S. tobacco manufacturer (first: American Tobacco Co.). He succeeds Edward A. Darr, 67, who becomes vice chairman of the board and chairman of the executive committee; Chairman...