Word: rosenberger
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Anna Marie Lederer Rosenberg decided to answer the letter by phone. In New York she put in a call to Defense Secretary George Marshall. "What's your answer, Anna?" asked Marshall. "Any request of yours to me has always been a command," said Mrs. Rosenberg...
Most people think that matches are useful only to start fires and light cigarettes. But not St. Louis' Rosenberg brothers. They think that the chief purpose of match books is to carry advertising. By selling this idea to big & little businessmen, the Rosenbergs have made their Universal Match Corp. the second biggest U.S. matchmaker (first: Diamond) with a gross of $12 million last year.* Last week President Adolph Rosenberg, 61, hailed a new Universal product as the first major innovation in match books in almost 60 years. The product: a match book with a waterproof striking strip that...
Confident that he was fully recovered from the cancer which struck him more than four years ago, Lieut. Commander Edwin M. Rosenberg last week won his battle against Navy red tape (TIME, Aug. 7) and was heading back to sea. President Truman signed a special Act of Congress which waived the Navy's retirement rules in Rosenberg's case, restored him to active duty. Rosenberg, now 31, had hoped for assignment to Korean waters. The Navy ordered him to the Atlantic as executive officer of a destroyer...
...native New Yorker of Russian descent, Sobell went to C.C.N.Y., where he became a classmate and close friend of Julius Rosenberg, accused of being a top spy in the atom ring (TIME, July 31). Engineer Sobell worked on top-secret U.S. radar and electronic devices for the Navy from 1942 to 1947, was working on more top-secret Government devices at Manhattan's Reeves Instrument Orp. until his sudden trip south. He was described by a fellow employee at Reeves as "the genius type," a man who could carry plenty of complex data in his head. Sobell...
...Said Rosenberg, itching for sea duty in Korean waters: "The only reason I'm telling this story now is so that others may see that . . . cancer does not necessarily mean a man is going to die right away...