Word: schwartz
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Benjamin I. Schwartz '38, professor of History and Government, explained that, although many of the unaligned nations "have more in common with our opponents than with us," their leaders are too determined "to be masters in their own bailiwicks" to submit to the control of either Moscow or Peking...
...prominent educators from the class are: Francis Keppel, former Dean of the Harvard School of Education and now U.S. Commissioner of Education: Courtney Craig Smith, President of Swarthmore College and American Secretary of the Rhodes Scholarship Committee: F. Skiddy on Stade, Dean of Freshmen at Harvard: and Professors Benjamin Schwartz and Cedric Whitman, both at Harvard: and professors Benjamin Schwartz and Cedric Whitman, both at Harvard. There are also in the class 105 lawyers and judges, 68 physicians, one airplane pilot, and one railroad engineer...
...many thinly financed syndicators who have long counted on inflation, quick depreciation write-offs and big revenues from full occupancy to keep them going. New York Syndicator Louis J. Glickman was recently pushed out of his own company when his creditors closed in and forced its reorganization. Sidney Schwartz, a fast-stepping New Yorker who in five years promoted 23 syndicates from Oregon to Florida, got caught by the softening market; he has been accused by the New York State attorney general of juggling his funds to keep his syndicates going, was barred from selling securities in New York...
...apparel giant yet comes near the giants in other industries, but two, Jonathan Logan and Bobbie Brooks, are jostling to crack $100 million in annual sales for the first time. Led by sharp, hard-driving David Schwartz, Logan last year reached $81 million; Maurice Saltzman's Bobbie Brooks was close behind at $75.5 million. Ranged well below them but growing fast is a $20 million to $30 million tier that includes Majestic Specialties, Russ Togs and White Stag, and a third echelon that is working upward from the $10 million plateau...
...reason, but with--as some weary old cur might say in the Trib--exceedingly mixed results. The players therefore have burdensome problems of pace and timing thrust on their somewhat frail shoulders, which either Mr. Morey or his director (was there a director?) ought to have lightened. Lovely Susan Schwartz as the Romantic Lead struggles womanfully but neither she nor Mr. Morey (who plays her opposite number--that is, Her Opposite Number) makes out very well...