Word: scotts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...list of nominations for stockholders, officers and directors for the coming year was also made public. Those nominated for stockholders for a term of five years are: Edward F. Miller, and A. C. Hanford; for officers for one year; president, Henry S. Thompson; vice president, Austin W. Scott; secretary, Walter Humphreys; treasurer, John L. Taylor; for other directors for one year; from Harvard at large, Delmar Leighton and Alfred S. Redfield; from M.I.T. at large, Horace S. Ford and Jasper Whiting; from officers of Harvard, Clinton P. Biddle; from students of M.I.T., Wilbur Huston; from senior class of Harvard, Bradford...
...Army was (and is always) vested in the Chief of Staff at Washington under whom General Pershing served as a subordinate in charge only of the A. E. F. During the 19 months of U. S. war four generals in succession were Chief of Staff-Hugh Lenox Scott, Tasker Howard Bliss, John Biddle and Peyton Conway March, General March, long, lean, bearded son of a college professor, took command in March 1918 and carried the Army through the Armistice. Last week appeared his The Nation at War* to take its place beside General Pershing's Pulitzer-prize-winning...
Unless the world heeds their charts. Technocrat Scott argues that, as man depends more & more on the industrial system, every future depression will be worse than its predecessor...
...confused with Westinghouse's Howard Scott...
Spokesman for the Technocrats and director of their "Energy Survey of North America," is Howard Scott, consulting engineer.* His analyses of power have set many a tycoon pondering into the night. Says he: "The price system and its concomitant political administration are hangovers from past sequences of history in which production depended on the conversion of energy through manpower alone. Before the last century the only means by which energy could be converted into products or services was the human engine, whose rate is equivalent to about one-tenth horsepower...