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Word: samuel (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

With Allis-Chalmers' $850 million in annual sales, the deal, if it goes through, stands to raise Signal's sales to $2.3 billion a year. Before Shumway, now 40, a pipe-smoking ex-Marine (and nephew of Founder-Chairman Samuel B. Mosher), became president in 1964, sales were $444 million. Vowing to look into "anything that's well managed and in a growth industry," Shumway is well on his way toward making his company-whatever its eventual name-one of the nation's hugest corporations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Signal Accomplishment | 12/8/1967 | See Source »

...Council will include nine full professors--Rogers G. Albritton, Bruce Chalmers, Merle Fainsod, Oscar Handlin, Stanley H. Hoffmann, Samuel P. Huntington, Ernest R. May, Anthony G. Oettinger '51, and Robert V. Pound...

Author: By Joel R. Kramer, | Title: 16 Faculty Members Named by Dean Ford To Advisory Council | 12/6/1967 | See Source »

Jorge Luis Borges is 68 and has been publishing poetry, "fictions," and essays since the early twenties. North American readers have discovered the Argentine's magic only in the last few years. The international audience began gathering in 1961, when Borges and Samuel Beckett shared the International Publishers' Prize...

Author: By Jack Davis, | Title: Jorge Luis Borges | 12/2/1967 | See Source »

Neither the call nor the clarification was forthcoming. What emerged was a profile of the dilemma of U.S. education. During three hours of morning talks, Coleman and Samuel S. Bowles, assistant professor of Economics, debated methodology to an uncomprehending audience. Then Preston Wilcox, Negro sociologist, delivered the ghettos' demand: put up or shut up; integrate or give blacks their schools, but do it now. On the one hand the experts quarreled. On the other the time bomb ticked in the ghettos...

Author: By David Blumenthal, | Title: Coleman Report Brings Revolution, No Solution | 11/28/1967 | See Source »

Better than Real. Sessions end with "battle tests," in which students use Harvard Business School case studies and take both sides of a merger that other businessmen have already consummated. "The deals arrived at in the work shops," says Columbia Professor Samuel Hayes, who referees the battle tests, "are consistently much better than they were in real life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mergers: New School Try | 11/24/1967 | See Source »

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